Cricket
By Aniket Kuila
April 17, 2025
10. New Zealand (NZC - $9 million)
It's on a smaller scale like this, given their resident population, with a majority of revenues derived from broadcasting rights and sponsorships.
9. West Indies (WICB - $15 million)
The financial scenario continues with their traditional approach as the cricketing saga of the West Indies is completely dependent on the ICC grants.
8. Sri Lanka (SLC-$20 million)
Apart from the broadcast rights and sponsorship, they generate revenue through sponsorship revenues and broadcast rights.
7. Zimbabwe (ZCB- $38 million)
A small budget operated mainly from ICC grants and a few sponsors within the developing cricket economy.
6. South Africa (CSA-$47 million)
International tours, broadcasting deals, and sponsorships all bring in revenue despite a few administrative gremlins.
5. Bangladesh (BCB-$51 million)
BCB cricket is increasingly earning revenues due to rising popularity among the most popular sports in Bangladesh and better-televised contracts.
4. Pakistan (PCB-$55 million)
Obviously increasing their revenue generation gained from increased broadcasting rights from international fixtures.
3. England (ECB- $59 million)
Domestic media deals covering home series pitting top contenders against countrymen as revenue sources.
2. Australia (CA-$79 million)
Revenue due to hosting major international series, good broadcast contracts, and continuous sponsorship interest in the successful teams.
1. India (BCCI-$2.2 billion)
It's the biggest and brightest cash board the most important contributions coming from multi-crossover rights, sponsorships, and the IPL.