Cricketing greats in India have historically always made millions through their performances on the field—and by 2025, many of them have also become multiple crore icons through business, endorsements, IPL franchise ownership, and startup investments. At the very top are Sachin Tendulkar, Virat Kohli, and MS Dhoni, each having a net worth in excess of a thousand crore rupees, followed closely by several types of former players and current players, rounding out the ten richest players. The highest net worth is Sachin Tendulkar, whose career and global brand allowed him to accrue a net worth of ₹1,250 crore ($170 million) from endorsement deals, sports related ventures, and personal financial investments. After that is the fitness icon and entrepreneur, Virat Kohli, with another estimated net worth of ₹1,050 crore (≈ $127 million). Kohli gets his wealth from his Indian cricket team contracts, and cricket brand, investments in start ups, and endorsements. MS Dhoni, eternal Captain Cool, is nearly on ₹1,000–1,100 crore ($110–132 million) because of his Indian Premier League (IPL) captaincy role, brand endorsements and recurrent investment in technology, sports franchises, and lifestyle businesses. In addition to the big three, former team captains and notable names such as Sourav Ganguly (₹700 crore), Virender Sehwag (₹340–350 crore), Yuvraj Singh (₹290–400 crore), Gautam Gambhir (₹260–280 crore), Rahul Dravid (₹190–320 crore), Suresh Raina (₹215 crore), and Rohit Sharma (₹214–325 crore) are also significant players when we look at the disparity of source, yet a consistent amount of wealth at the top. This list does not include just earnings; it reflects how Indian cricketers have used their celebrity status to produce solid businesses. From new startup investments to fashion brands, sports franchises to philanthropy, these ten represent the stars who earned legacies of billions of rupees. As there are no limitations on scale from least to most, readers will see the ways in which each name developed their net worth, and what separated the very wealthy from the still wealthy.  

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