How to start a box cricket facility in India.
Turf, net cage, group pricing, and why corporate bookings are where box cricket venues actually make their margin — a complete guide for 1 to 3 box setups.
Box cricket — indoor cricket played on a turf surface in an enclosed cage, with modified rules for the tight dimensions — has gone from novelty to mainstream faster than most venue operators expected. Mumbai and Hyderabad led the way. By 2024, dedicated box cricket facilities had opened in tier-2 cities including Nagpur, Surat, Vadodara, and Coimbatore. If you're in a city with a strong recreational cricket community and a gap in quality indoor facilities, the opportunity is real.
The box cricket opportunity
Cricket's problem in India is infrastructure: you need a ground, you need 22 players (or enough to play some version), and you need to trust that neither the weather nor the municipality is going to cancel on you. Box cricket strips away all three problems. 8 players per side, enclosed turf, no weather dependency, 45–60 minutes per match.
The revenue model that works: group bookings, not individual walk-ins. Corporate teams, housing society groups, college friends, and birthday parties are your primary market — not the individual who wants to practice alone. This changes how you market, how you price, and how you staff.
"We're fully booked on weekends three weeks out in October and November. Corporate bookings from December to February are the real money — companies are doing team outings and box cricket is significantly cheaper than a hotel banquet. We run six to eight sessions on a busy Saturday and we're done by 9 pm."
Seasonality is a real constraint: cricket enthusiasm peaks October–March (Rabi season, school season, IPL in April–May). June–August is soft unless you're in a city with year-round demand or you've built a strong corporate base that runs all-weather.
Facility design
A standard box cricket enclosure is 60–70 ft × 35–40 ft (roughly 18–21 m × 10–12 m). The playing surface is artificial turf, enclosed on all sides and overhead by a high-strength net structure. The net cage is what makes the economics work: balls don't leave the field, play is fast, and the format is tight.
Structural requirements:
- Ceiling height: 6–8 m (20–26 ft) minimum. Lower than that and high shots hit the net constantly, frustrating good batters.
- Turf surface: 1.5–2 inch pile artificial grass turf with shock-absorbing underpad. Good quality turf runs ₹80–150/sq ft installed.
- Net enclosure: tensioned high-density polyethylene (HDPE) or nylon net on a galvanised steel structure. This is the highest single capex item. For a 2,500 sq ft box: ₹8–15 lakh installed.
- Lighting: even, shadow-free overhead lighting at 300–400 lux minimum. High-output LED panels. Budget ₹2–4 lakh per box for proper lighting.
- Flooring under turf: levelled concrete base or compacted sub-base. Don't skip this — uneven ground under turf creates ball bounce inconsistencies and trip hazards.
These figures include turf, net structure, lighting, and basic fit-out. They exclude the building shell, A/C (often not needed given the high ceilings and ventilation), and security deposit.
Equipment
Bats: plastic/soft cricket bats (tennis-ball format) for casual play, ₹800–2,000 each. Budget replacement every 4–6 months. Maintain 4–6 per box.
Balls: tennis balls run ₹30–60 each. Serious box cricket facilities use soft-leather balls (₹150–300 each). Tennis balls are fine for most recreational groups; soft-leather balls are preferred by players who want a more authentic feel. Stock both.
Stumps and bails: retractable stumps or tube stumps fixed to the turf surface work better than traditional spike stumps. Budget ₹2,000–5,000 per set.
Scoring boards: a simple LED or manual scoreboard per box. Groups expect some way to track scores — even a whiteboard is better than nothing.
Changing and storage: lockers or a dedicated changing area adds ₹2–4 lakh to fit-out costs but meaningfully improves the experience for groups that come straight from offices.
Opening cost summary
The StatGrid above shows turnkey construction costs (turf + net + lighting + basic fit-out). Total opening costs add equipment, fit-out upgrades, and security deposit on top:
| Tier-3/4 (1 box) | Tier-2 (2–3 boxes) | Metro (3+ boxes) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Box construction (turnkey) | ₹18–30L | ₹32–50L | ₹48–75L |
| Equipment (bats, balls, stumps) | ₹25–50K | ₹50K–1L | ₹80K–1.5L |
| Scoring boards + tech | ₹10–25K | ₹20–40K | ₹30–60K |
| Fit-out, seating + changing | ₹1–3L | ₹2–5L | ₹4–8L |
| Licensing + deposit | ₹2–5L | ₹4–8L | ₹7–15L |
| Total to open | ₹22–39L | ₹39–65L | ₹60–1Cr |
| Monthly running (excl rent) | ₹25–45K | ₹45–80K | ₹80K–1.5L |
Box cricket is one of the higher-capex venues in this guide on a per-square-foot basis. The net structure and turf are purpose-built and can't be cut without compromising the playing experience. The saving comes on ceiling height (6–8 m versus badminton's 9 m) and that competitive ground-floor rent in many tier-2 and metro markets remains accessible at the required footprint.
Seasonality warning: carry 3 months of working capital before you open, not 1. June–August revenue at most tier-2 venues drops to 30–45% of peak season. If your EMI or rent assumes peak-season occupancy year-round, the off-season will create a cash problem regardless of how well the launch goes.
Pricing and revenue model
The per-session model (flat fee for the box regardless of headcount) is universal in box cricket. Charging per person doesn't work when group sizes vary — a 10-player match and a 6-player match use the same box for the same hour.
Tiered pricing by session length is increasingly common: a 45-minute session at ₹2,500, a 60-minute match at ₹3,200, a 90-minute double-header at ₹5,000. Longer sessions increase revenue per booking and work well for corporate groups who want a full match experience.
Memberships work differently in box cricket than in racket sports. Most successful facilities run a "session package" model: buy 10 sessions upfront and get 11, valid for 6 months. This doesn't sell well as an annual commitment because cricket groups have inconsistent schedules, but pre-paid packs at a small discount lock in future revenue.
Corporate revenue: the multiplier
The corporate market for box cricket is under-exploited by most facility operators. A company that runs a monthly team outing will pay ₹8,000–20,000 for an hour-and-a-half of box cricket, equipment, and basic hospitality. The key to landing corporate accounts:
- Have a dedicated "corporate booking" contact process (WhatsApp number + quick response)
- Offer a package: box + soft drinks/chai + a basic printed scorecard they can share on the company group
- Follow up every booked corporate group within 48 hours to see if they want to book next month
One good corporate account (12 bookings per year at ₹10,000 average) is ₹1.2 lakh in annual guaranteed revenue from a single relationship.
Managing multi-box scheduling
A 3-box facility running group bookings on a Saturday has 15–20 distinct sessions to coordinate. The operational risk is: two groups booked for the same box at the same time, with one group already mid-match and another arriving expecting their slot.
You need per-box scheduling with buffer time built in (15 minutes between sessions for changeover and net check), a simple way for staff to see what's booked and what's empty, and a reminder process that confirms group bookings 24 hours in advance. Groups that don't show without notice cost you the slot entirely.
Staffing a box cricket facility
The staffing demand is chronically underestimated. The operation looks simple — a box, some bats, a timer — until you're running Saturday at 80% occupancy and every box needs a 15-minute changeover between sessions.
Tier-3/4 (1 box): Owner-operated. One person manages bookings, collects payment, oversees changeovers, and handles the scoring board. The single constraint: changeover — cleaning the box, checking net integrity, and resetting equipment takes 10–15 minutes per session. On a busy Saturday, that's non-stop from noon to 9 pm. Build the 15-minute buffer into your session slots; don't treat it as optional.
Tier-2 (2–3 boxes): Two staff on peak days. One at the desk handling bookings and payments; one on the floor managing changeovers, scoreboards, and equipment. On a quiet weekday evening with 2–3 sessions total, one person handles everything fine.
The booking confirmation job is underestimated. Groups don't always show for advance bookings without a reminder. A WhatsApp confirmation 24 hours before each booking — "Hi, your box is confirmed for Saturday 4 pm, reply to confirm" — recovers 15–20% of groups that would otherwise no-show. At ₹2,500–3,500 per missed session, that process alone is worth ₹8,000–15,000/month in recovered revenue at a busy tier-2 facility. Assign this task explicitly to one person; if it's everyone's job, it won't happen consistently.
Metro (3+ boxes): Three staff on peak days: one for bookings and cash, two for floor and changeovers. The booking management complexity at 15–20 sessions per Saturday is equivalent to a busy snooker club on a Friday evening. Without a system showing what's booked, what's running, and what needs changeover — all at a glance — sessions overrun, groups clash, and the close becomes a 45-minute audit.
What works at each tier in India
Tier-3/4 (towns and smaller cities)
One box, one person, in-season focus. A single enclosure (₹18–30L) needs 4+ paid sessions per day on average to justify itself. In a town with strong cricket culture, that's achievable October–March. June–August will be 1–2 sessions/day — plan for it, don't pretend it won't happen.
What doesn't work: a 3-box facility with event infrastructure in a market that doesn't have corporate demand. The corporate booking model that drives box cricket profitability in tier-2 simply doesn't exist at scale in most tier-3/4 cities. Build for what's actually there — Friday evening group bookings, college teams, housing society fixtures.
The one investment that pays: turf quality. Players notice the difference between a professional surface and a cheap one immediately. A ₹1–2L upgrade on turf quality is visible to every group that books and generates the positive word-of-mouth that fills your next weekend.
Tier-2 cities
The strongest market for box cricket in India. Housing society culture is active, office teams run outings, and property costs are manageable. A 2–3 box facility at ₹35–75L total capex can reach break-even at 3–4 sessions per box per day.
Corporate is the multiplier. One good corporate account (12 bookings/year at ₹10,000–12,000 per session) generates ₹1.2–1.4L annually from a single relationship. Build the corporate pipeline actively in October–November so you have 8–10 committed accounts before the lean June–August months.
Seasonality management is real: in the off-season, corporate bookings don't disappear the way recreational demand does. Your corporate base is the revenue floor that makes the year work.
Tier-1/Metro
Competitive market with real location dependency. Established players exist in Mumbai, Pune, Hyderabad, and Bangalore. Entry requires either a clear location advantage (near a large IT campus or dense residential cluster with no nearby facility) or a differentiation play — better turf, dedicated changing rooms, event hospitality.
The metro pitch: corporate event packaging. A metro HR team will pay ₹15,000–25,000 for box cricket + catering + printed scorecards as an all-inclusive team outing. That's a fundamentally different conversation from "rent our box at ₹3,500/hr." Package and price it accordingly.
Weekend walk-in group bookings build margin; corporate accounts anchor the base. In a metro, you need both working by month 6 or the rent maths don't hold.
The first 30 days
Two weeks before opening: Run a WhatsApp pre-registration campaign in your immediate catchment. In residential areas or near office clusters, a simple message — "new box cricket facility opening, first booking at 50% off, reply to register" — generates a waiting list faster than any paid digital campaign. Target housing society WhatsApp groups, college friend groups, and office groups within 3 km. Offer 10 pre-registration slots at ₹1,500 per box (instead of ₹2,500) — these confirm in advance and give you a revenue floor for your opening weekend.
Days 1–7: Open with introductory flat pricing: ₹2,000 per box per hour, no minimum headcount. Every group that plays in the first week is a potential repeat customer and a referral source. Ask every group before they leave: "Do you have a corporate team or office group who'd enjoy this?" — that question does more for your corporate pipeline than any outreach you'll do later.
Post a reel after each session — nothing complex, just 30 seconds of the match with decent lighting. Box cricket content performs well organically because it looks like something people haven't seen indoors before.
Days 8–14: Follow up with every group that booked. WhatsApp the booking contact: "Hope you enjoyed it — we'd love to have you back. Here's our standard rate and our slot availability for the next two weekends." A 30–40% rebooking rate from first-time groups in this window is healthy.
Begin direct outreach to the top 5 companies near you. A message to an HR contact or office manager: "We run corporate team sessions for groups of 8–20, about 90 minutes, ₹10,000–12,000 for the full session including equipment and a basic team scorecard. Happy to do a trial at a discounted rate." Even one confirmed corporate account in the first month changes your fixed-cost coverage.
Days 15–30: Run your first weekend tournament. An 8-team knockout on a Sunday, entry ₹2,500 per team, prize of ₹5,000 cash. This costs you roughly ₹5,000 in prize money and fills all boxes for a half-day. More importantly, it generates a WhatsApp group of 60–80 competitive players who are now aware of your facility and invested in coming back.
Set a target for day 30: 3 confirmed recurring corporate accounts (monthly bookings) and 15 individual groups who've booked more than once. Those two numbers, together, indicate a viable business. Either one alone is a warning sign.
