Most Expensive Buys in IPL 2026 auction - Top 10 Costliest Buys
Quick Answer: Who Was the Most Expensive Player in IPL 2026 Auction?
Australia all-rounder Cameron Green was the most expensive player in the IPL 2026 auction, bought by Kolkata Knight Riders for ₹25.20 crore.
That price also made him the most expensive overseas player in IPL history, beating Mitchell Starc’s ₹24.75 crore record from IPL 2024.
Top 10 Most Expensive Players in IPL 2026 Auction
Rank | Player | Team | Base Price | Winning Bid | Capped / Uncapped |
1 | Cameron Green | Kolkata Knight Riders | ₹2 crore | ₹25.20 crore | Capped |
2 | Matheesha Pathirana | Kolkata Knight Riders | ₹2 crore | ₹18 crore | Capped |
3 | Kartik Sharma | Chennai Super Kings | ₹30 lakh | ₹14.20 crore | Uncapped |
3 | Prashant Veer | Chennai Super Kings | ₹30 lakh | ₹14.20 crore | Uncapped |
5 | Liam Livingstone | Sunrisers Hyderabad | ₹2 crore | ₹13 crore | Capped |
6 | Mustafizur Rahman | Kolkata Knight Riders | ₹2 crore | ₹9.20 crore | Capped |
7 | Josh Inglis | Lucknow Super Giants | ₹2 crore | ₹8.60 crore | Capped |
8 | Auqib Dar | Delhi Capitals | ₹30 lakh | ₹8.40 crore | Uncapped |
9 | Ravi Bishnoi | Rajasthan Royals | ₹2 crore | ₹7.20 crore | Capped |
10 | Jason Holder | Gujarat Titans | ₹2 crore | ₹7 crore | Capped |
Player-by-Player Breakdown of the IPL 2026 Auction Top Buys
1. Cameron Green — ₹25.20 crore, Kolkata Knight Riders
- Cameron Green is the headline name of the IPL 2026 auction and the most expensive overseas signing in IPL history.
- KKR walked in with the largest purse of ₹64.3 crore and used it to win a long bidding war. CSK joined the bidding against KKR after Rajasthan Royals exited at ₹13.40 crore, and the bid took more than ten minutes to close.
- Why so much? Green is a true all-rounder — a top/middle-order batter who can also bowl genuine seam-up. That’s rare and expensive. The risk: his back has been an issue, and he missed the 2025 edition with a back injury.
- One detail to know: Green’s contract is capped at ₹18 crore due to a new IPL salary cap on overseas players at mini-auctions. The amount above the cap goes to the BCCI’s player welfare fund.
2. Matheesha Pathirana — ₹18 crore, Kolkata Knight Riders
- KKR doubled down on overseas firepower with the Sri Lankan death-overs specialist.
- The bidding here was wild. Demand began with DC and LSG. Once the bid reached ₹15.6 crore, DC dropped out. KKR entered and priced out LSG at ₹18 crore. Interestingly, CSK did not bid for Pathirana, who they had released at a price of ₹13 crore after IPL 2025.
- Pathirana’s slingy action, raw pace, and yorkers make him one of the best death bowlers in T20 cricket. For KKR, who already had Cameron Green, this was a clear “win the back end of the innings” move.
3. Kartik Sharma — ₹14.20 crore, Chennai Super Kings
- Kartik Sharma became one of the most expensive uncapped players in IPL history, joining Prashant Veer at a record ₹14.20 crore price.
- The 19-year-old wicketkeeper-batter from Chennai’s auction strategy notebook came at a stunning price. He, along with Prashant Veer, broke Avesh Khan’s 2022 record of ₹10 crore for the most expensive uncapped Indian player at an IPL auction.
- The jump from ₹30 lakh base price to ₹14.20 crore is massive, but CSK clearly view him as a long-term core piece — a young keeper-batter you can build the next five seasons around.
4. Prashant Veer — ₹14.20 crore, Chennai Super Kings
- CSK’s twin uncapped gamble: a 20-year-old left-arm spin all-rounder for the post-Jadeja era.
- Same price, same team, similar logic — but a different profile. Veer is a left-arm spinner who can bat, and CSK have built titles on Indian spin-bowling all-rounders. Premium uncapped Indian prices come with risk, but CSK saw enough in his domestic numbers to back him hard.
5. Liam Livingstone — ₹13 crore, Sunrisers Hyderabad
- SRH stayed true to their attacking identity and paid for it.
- After KKR exited and a bidding battle with GT and LSG, SRH eventually won and bought Livingstone for ₹13 crore. Livingstone gives them a power-hitting middle-order option who also bowls handy spin — exactly the kind of profile that fits SRH’s high-scoring template alongside Heinrich Klaasen.
- The risk is consistency. Livingstone’s IPL career has had brilliant nights and quiet stretches. At ₹13 crore, SRH will need more of the former.
6. Mustafizur Rahman — ₹9.20 crore, Kolkata Knight Riders
- KKR’s third buy in the top six — a serious commitment to overseas talent.
- The Bangladesh left-armer brings cutters, change-ups, and proven death-overs experience.
- For KKR, this rounds out a bowling attack already loaded with Pathirana. Mustafizur’s left-arm angle gives them a different look in the middle overs and at the death.
7. Josh Inglis — ₹8.60 crore, Lucknow Super Giants
- LSG paid a premium for a player who’ll only be available for part of the season.
- SRH and LSG engaged in a bidding war, and Lucknow eventually signed him for ₹8.6 crore, even though he will be playing only four matches in IPL 2026.
- That’s a steep price-per-match, but Inglis is an Australian keeper-batter with proven T20 firepower. LSG clearly believed his availability window was worth the rate.
8. Auqib Nabi Dar — ₹8.40 crore, Delhi Capitals
- The biggest uncapped Indian pace story of the auction.
- Picked by Delhi Capitals for ₹8.40 crore, Auqib Nabi — registered as Auqib Dar — was the most expensive Indian bowler, capped or uncapped, at the mini auction.
- That’s a 28x jump from his ₹30 lakh base price. The Jammu & Kashmir pacer is a swing bowler who’s improved his death-overs skills, and as a 29-year-old who helped J&K lift the Ranji Trophy, he brings red-ball-tested control to DC’s pace plans alongside Mitchell Starc.
9. Ravi Bishnoi — ₹7.20 crore, Rajasthan Royals
- An Indian leg-spinner is always valuable, and RR knew it.
- The contest started with RR and CSK, with bidding crossing the ₹5 crore mark. SRH entered late, but Rajasthan eventually sealed the deal at ₹7.2 crore.
- Bishnoi was released by LSG after a tough 2025 (9 wickets in 11 matches at an economy of 10.83), but his overall record — 72 wickets in 77 IPL games at an economy of 8.21 — is the bigger picture. RR needed a middle-overs Indian wrist-spinner. They got one.
10. Jason Holder — ₹7 crore, Gujarat Titans
- A veteran all-rounder for a settled squad that just needed balance.
- The bidding sparked a contest between CSK and Gujarat Titans, with GT securing him for ₹7 crore and filling a key seam-bowling all-rounder slot.
- Holder offers height, bounce, lower-order hitting, and ice-cold experience in pressure situations. GT had traded out other overseas options and needed exactly this profile — a do-it-all Caribbean veteran.
Notable Mention: Venkatesh Iyer — ₹7 crore, Royal Challengers Bengaluru
Venkatesh Iyer was bought by RCB for ₹7 crore — the same price as Jason Holder. The interesting context: Venkatesh had been bought by KKR for ₹23.75 crore in the IPL 2025 auction, so this is a significant correction in his market value. He’s worth a mention so readers don’t think the list missed him.
Summary – IPL 2026 Auction Top Buys
- KKR dominated the expensive buys list, a spending pattern that could have a major impact on the IPL 2026 team rankings. Three players in the top six — Cameron Green, Matheesha Pathirana, and Mustafizur Rahman — all came to Kolkata. They walked in with the biggest purse and used almost all of it on overseas match-winners.
- CSK invested heavily in uncapped Indian players in IPL 2026, with Kartik Sharma and Prashant Veer both going for ₹14.20 crore. . Two ₹14.20 crore buys on Kartik Sharma and Prashant Veer signal a long-term squad-building shift.
- All-rounders remained the most valuable asset class. Green, Veer, Holder, Livingstone — the biggest bids went to players who give you two skills for one slot.
- Overseas players still commanded premium prices, even with the new ₹18 crore salary cap on overseas mini-auction signings.
- Indian uncapped players are now major auction assets. ₹14.20 crore for a teenage keeper-batter and ₹8.40 crore for a J&K swing bowler tells you franchises are betting bigger than ever on domestic talent.
Total spend across the auction: ₹215.45 crore on 77 players, with 29 overseas players among them.
FAQS❓
Cameron Green was the most expensive player, bought by Kolkata Knight Riders for ₹25.20 crore.
Cameron Green was the most expensive overseas player and also the most expensive overseas signing in IPL history.
Kartik Sharma and Prashant Veer shared the record, both bought by Chennai Super Kings for ₹14.20 crore each.
Kolkata Knight Riders bought Cameron Green for ₹25.20 crore.
A total of 77 players were sold for a combined spend of ₹215.45 crore.