Dream11 was the biggest fantasy sports platform in India, with over 220 million registered users at its peak. It became a unicorn in 2019, signed Indian cricket legends as brand ambassadors, and sponsored the IPL. Then in August 2025, Parliament passed a law that paused everything.
Understanding how Dream11 works and makes money requires looking at both the model that made it one of India’s most valuable startups, and the regulatory shift that upended it.
What Is Fantasy Sports and How Does Dream11 Work
Fantasy sports lets you build a virtual team using real players from an upcoming match. Your team earns points based on how those players actually perform. More runs, more wickets, more goals, more points. Users with the highest scores at the end win cash prizes from the contest pool.
Dream11 ran this format across cricket, football, kabaddi, basketball, and several other sports. You pick a contest, pay an entry fee from as low as Rs 35 to over Rs 1 lakh for high-stakes leagues, and submit your team before the match begins. Once live, selections cannot be changed.
The Supreme Court of India upheld fantasy sports as a game of skill, not gambling. That ruling gave Dream11 the legal foundation to operate paid contests across most states.
How Dream11 Made Money
The core model was straightforward. When users joined a paid contest, Dream11 kept a platform fee of 15 to 25 percent of the total prize pool. The remaining amount was distributed among winners.
If 1,000 users each paid Rs 50 to enter a contest, the total pool was Rs 50,000. Dream11 retained up to Rs 12,500 as its fee. Winners split the rest based on rankings.
Beyond contest fees, Dream11 earned heavily through sponsorships. It was the title sponsor of the 2020 IPL and held the Indian cricket team’s jersey sponsorship until 2026. Dream11 Prime, a subscription offering expert analysis and player stats, added another revenue layer. In FY25, the platform reported annual revenue of approximately Rs 7,370 crore.
The 2025 Law That Changed Everything
In August 2025, Parliament passed the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Act. The legislation banned real-money online games. Dream11 paused all paid contests almost immediately after the bill passed.
This was not a minor adjustment. Paid contests accounted for over 90 percent of Dream11’s revenue. The platform pivoted to a free-to-play model and began onboarding advertisers like Swiggy, Astrotalk, and Tata Neu to replace the lost income from entry fees.
The company also withdrew as the Indian cricket team’s lead jersey sponsor following the law. Dream11’s parent company, Dream Sports, began exploring adjacent opportunities including Dream Pay and a finance product called Dream Money.
What the Model Still Teaches About Freemium Growth
Even setting aside the 2025 disruption, Dream11’s rise holds lessons worth understanding.
The platform acquired users through free contests. Once engaged, the shift to paid contests happened naturally. That freemium-to-paid funnel is one of the most efficient customer acquisition models in consumer internet.
Moreover, Dream11 was built entirely around existing sports fandom. It did not manufacture engagement. It converted passive viewers into active participants. A cricket fan watching an IPL match is already emotionally invested. Fantasy cricket gave that investment a financial dimension. That combination scaled faster in India than almost any other consumer product in the country’s startup history.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Is Dream11 legal in India?
Fantasy sports in India are recognized as games of skill by the Supreme Court. Dream11 operated legally in most states under this classification. However, the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Act passed in August 2025 effectively halted real-money paid contests on the platform. The legal landscape continues to evolve.
2. How does Dream11 make money from fantasy contests?
Dream11 charged a platform fee of 15 to 25 percent on each paid contest’s prize pool. If a contest collected Rs 1 lakh in entry fees, Dream11 kept up to Rs 25,000 before distributing prizes to winners. Additional revenue came from sponsorships, brand deals, and premium subscriptions.
3. What happened to Dream11 after the 2025 online gaming ban?
After Parliament passed the online gaming law in August 2025, Dream11 paused paid contests and shifted to a free-to-play model. It onboarded advertisers to compensate for lost revenue, withdrew from the Indian cricket team jersey sponsorship, and began exploring new product lines under the Dream Sports umbrella.