Mumbai: As the IPL Auction returns this week, the big question on everyone’s mind is simple: Will the bidding war break new ground again?
To set the stage, the ICYMI team at Rediffusion has compiled a year-by-year look at the IPL’s highest-ever auction bids — a financial timeline that shows just how dramatically the league has evolved since 2008.
ICYMI_The IPL Auction’s Most Ex…
From ₹6 Crore to ₹27 Crore: How IPL Auctions Became Cricket’s Financial Theatre
The auctions began with a bang in 2008 when MS Dhoni fetched $1.5 million, setting the tone for a franchise era built around marquee captains. What followed over 18 years was an escalation fuelled by star power, game-changing all-rounders, specialist roles, and, increasingly, narrative-driven investments.
Through the early 2010s, leadership and versatility commanded top-dollar — from Gautam Gambhir’s ₹2.4 crore acquisition to Ravindra Jadeja’s ₹2 million breakthrough as a young all-rounder. By mid-decade, Indian match-winners took centre stage, with Yuvraj Singh topping consecutive auctions at ₹14 crore (2014) and ₹16 crore (2015), signalling the premium associated with proven big-match temperament.
The late 2010s saw both strategic surprises and bold gambles. From Ben Stokes’ repeat headline-grabbing bids in 2017 and 2018 to the twin shockers of Jaydev Unadkat and Varun Chakravarthy in 2019, auctions increasingly became a blend of data-driven risk and gut instinct.
The Era of Record-Setters
The 2020s have delivered some of the most staggering price tags in IPL history.
Pat Cummins’ ₹15.5 crore deal in 2020 opened the door for even larger fast-bowling spend, followed closely by Chris Morris rewriting the charts in 2021. Youth surged next — Ishan Kishan commanded ₹15.25 crore in 2022 as teams bet on long-term potential.
But the true escalation arrived in the last two years.
Sam Curran’s ₹18.5 crore splash in 2023 reaffirmed the unmatched value of all-rounders, only to be surpassed by Mitchell Starc’s sensational ₹24.75 crore buy in 2024 — the biggest ever for a bowler.
Then came 2025.
Rishabh Pant’s ₹27 crore return-to-cricket narrative became the most expensive bid in IPL history, turning a comeback story into a historic moment. It wasn’t just a bid; it was a statement.
What Does This Mean for the 2025 Auction?
If history is any indicator, IPL auctions rarely plateau. They reset. They escalate. They surprise.
With teams undergoing transitions, searching for specialist finishers, and valuing multi-skill assets more than ever, analysts expect at least a few players to trigger intense bidding wars. The psychological threshold of ₹30 crore — once unthinkable — may now be within striking distance.
As the gavel prepares to drop, one thing is certain:
In the IPL, the only predictable trend is unpredictability — and the next record is always one bid away.
Would you like this adapted into a shorter newsroom-style brief, a LinkedIn post, or a carousel copy?
















