IPL 2025 advertising volumes surge by seven per cent: 22 match scorecard from TAM Sports

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IPL 2025 advertising volumes surge by seven per cent: 22 match scorecard from TAM Sports

Cricket's cash cow delivers another bumper week as brands bowl over consumers

Tata IPL

MUMBAI:  Advertising volumes for the Indian Premier League (IPL) have jumped by seven per cent in 2025, surpassing the previous season's 22-match milestone. The tournament, cricket's glitziest carnival, continues to be an advertiser's dream with volumes climbing from 100 in IPL 17 to a whopping 107 in IPL 18, according to TAM Sports (A Division of TAM Media Research).

growth everywhere

The league's magnetic pull for brands remains undeniable, with the latest data showing remarkable growth across the board. IPL 2024 witnessed a two per cent growth in categories, 14 per cent rise in advertisers, and an impressive 21 per cent surge in brands – clear evidence of advertisers' unwavering confidence in the tournament's broad consumer reach.

Among the heavy hitters, Parle biscuits claimed the top spot across all 21 matches (barring the opening game). The top five advertisers in IPL 18 accounted for 30 per cent of overall volumes, with Parle Biscuits leading the charge while Sports Technologies and Volini Packaging maintained their strong presence in both IPL 18 and IPL 17.

Collectively, the top five categories represented more than 40 per cent of total ad volumes. Ecom-gaming and mouth freshener emerged as recurring crowd-pleasers, featuring prominently in both seasons. Notably, two of the top five categories in IPL 18 came from the food & beverages sector, with mouth freshener dominating IPL 18's advertising landscape.

New categories

The tournament also welcomed 24 new categories and 84 new brands advertising across 22 matches compared to IPL 17. Among these fresh faces, Parle Platina Hide & Seek established itself as the leading newcomer, followed by Rajshree Silver Coated Elaichi.

With these numbers, IPL continues to prove it's not just cricket's biggest party – it's also the advertising world's most lucrative playground.