Skip to main content
KingExch9 – King Exchange cricket betting ID logo

Cricket Betting ID – Bet on Every Format

Test match on day five, a PSL group game, an IPL chase — one ID covers all of it with exchange odds, UPI deposits and UTR-tracked payouts. This guide untangles the satta-vs-exchange vocabulary and walks the full deposit-to-withdrawal lifecycle.

Cricket Betting ID Login

New here? Create your free King Exchange ID in about 5 minutes.

One ID, the Whole Cricket Calendar

I'm Abhishek. I've traded cricket markets since 2019, and if there's one mistake I see new players make, it's taking an ID that only really works for one tournament. A proper cricket betting ID should earn its keep in March during a Test series just as well as it does on an April IPL night. Here's what full-format coverage on the KingExchange panel actually looks like.

IPL & T20 Leagues

All 74 IPL fixtures plus BBL, PSL, CPL, SA20 and The Hundred. Session lines, toss, match winner, player props — the deepest liquidity of the year lives here.

Internationals

Tests, ODIs and T20Is — bilateral series, Asia Cup, World Cups. Test markets include innings leads and session runs that casual books never list.

Domestic & County

Syed Mushtaq Ali, Vijay Hazare, County Championship and List-A games when listed. Liquidity is thinner — I flag that honestly below — but the markets exist.

Women's Cricket

WPL and women's internationals now carry proper match-odds and session markets — coverage that simply didn't exist on most panels two seasons ago.

A scope note so you land on the right page: this guide covers the betting ID across every format. If IPL is your only interest, the IPL betting ID page is built for exactly that — IPL 2026 market types, venue and toss angles, in-play session strategy. Come back here when the league ends and the international calendar takes over; the same ID keeps working.

Satta ID vs Exchange ID — Cleaning Up the Terminology

Search results mash these words together, so let's separate them properly. "Satta" is the colloquial umbrella — in most WhatsApp groups, "cricket satta ID" just means any login that lets you stake on cricket. Nothing wrong with the word. But under that umbrella sit two very different systems, and knowing which one you're holding matters for your money.

The old khaiwal system

Traditional satta runs through a khaiwal — a local bookie who quotes bhav (rates) by phone or chat, records your bets in his ledger, and settles with you personally after the match. The rates are whatever he says they are, the ledger is his, and your recourse if he disputes a settlement is... social. I'm not moralising; plenty of khaiwals settle honestly for decades. But structurally, you're trusting one man's notebook.

The exchange model

An exchange ID puts you on a live order book instead. Prices form from thousands of users backing and laying against each other; every bet is timestamped in the panel; settlement follows the official match result automatically. The platform earns a commission on net winnings — typically 2–5% — rather than building a margin into every quote. You can see the money matched at each price, which means the "bhav" isn't one man's opinion anymore, it's a market.

Why the word survives

If exchanges are the modern system, why does everyone still say satta? Habit, mostly — the word predates the internet by generations, and the session-market bracket quoting you'll meet on any panel is a direct descendant of khaiwal bhav. Vocabulary migrated even where the machinery changed. That's also why searches for "cricket satta ID" and "cricket betting ID" land on the same providers: the products converged, the language didn't. Use whichever word you grew up with; just know what's underneath it before money moves.

The practical upshot: when someone offers you a "cricket satta ID", ask which system sits behind it. If the answer is a panel with visible back/lay columns and UTR-verified deposits, you're on an exchange — that's what KingExchange issues and what this whole site documents. If the answer is "just WhatsApp me your bets", you're in the ledger world, with ledger-world risks. And whichever you hold, the 18+ rule and the skill-based-entertainment framing apply — this is risk capital, never rent money. Our responsible gaming page is the honest read on that.

Bookie ID vs Exchange ID — the Practical Differences

One more distinction, because "online bookie ID" gets marketed as if it were the same product. A bookie ID logs you into a fixed-odds panel where the operator sets every price and is your counterparty on every bet. An exchange ID matches you against other players. Four differences show up in practice:

  • Who sets the price. Bookie: the house, margin included. Exchange: the market — which is why exchange odds ran 3–7% better on the match-winner markets I tracked through IPL 2025.
  • Lay betting. Only the exchange lets you bet against an outcome. That single feature unlocks trading — backing at 2.10 before the toss and laying at 1.80 after it, locking profit whatever happens. A bookie panel structurally can't offer it.
  • Winner limits. Bookies cut winning accounts; it's their oldest habit. An exchange doesn't care that you win — you're beating other players, not the platform, and the commission gets earned either way.
  • Settlement transparency. Exchange settlement follows the official scorecard by rule (the market settlement rules are published). Bookie settlements on fancy markets can turn into arguments.

Honest caveat in the other direction: a fixed-odds panel will always match your full stake instantly, while an exchange needs a counterparty. On IPL and internationals you'll never feel this — session markets alone turn over crores — but on a Tuesday county game, a ₹50,000 stake may fill partially and wait. Size accordingly.

Picking a Provider — My 7-Point Checklist

I trade for a living, so my provider checklist is boringly practical — it's about whether my money moves when I say so. Before taking any cricket betting ID, check:

  • Track record. Years on the same domain and number beat any promise. Desks with history protect it.
  • One stable WhatsApp number. Verify it on the provider's own site — ours is published on the official WhatsApp number page — never from a forwarded message.
  • Demo ID on request. Two minutes of dummy-balance browsing tells you more than any sales pitch.
  • UTR confirmation culture. Every deposit acknowledged against its reference number, every time. Sloppy books today are your stuck withdrawal tomorrow.
  • Published limits and rules. Minimum stake, settlement policy, void rules — written down, not "depends".
  • Payout proof. A desk that posts daily payout screenshots (ours run on Telegram) is staking its reputation publicly.
  • Support at 3 am. Cricket runs on Australian and Caribbean time zones too. 24x7 has to be literal.

If you've settled on KingExchange and want the ID itself, the online cricket ID page walks the three-step WhatsApp flow — message, receive login, deposit — plus the security red-flags my colleague Akash checks before recommending any desk. This page stays format-and-mechanics; that one gets you playing today. Or skip straight to registration if you're ready.

Deposit → Bet → Withdraw: the Full Lifecycle, With UTR Detail

Money mechanics are where good providers separate from bad ones, so let me walk the entire loop the way it actually happens — including the reference numbers most guides skip.

The UTR is your receipt. Every UPI or IMPS transaction generates a Unique Transaction Reference — a 12-digit number sitting in your payment app's transaction detail (NEFT versions run 16–22 characters). When you deposit, the desk credits your balance only after matching your UTR against its bank feed. That's not bureaucracy, it's your protection: the UTR is bank-grade proof your money arrived, independent of anyone's word.

King Exchange cricket betting ID card used across deposit, betting and withdrawal lifecycle
StageWhat happensTypical time
1. Deposit sentYou pay from any UPI app (₹300 minimum) and copy the 12-digit UTR from the transaction detail.Instant
2. UTR sharedPaste the UTR in the WhatsApp chat. The desk matches it against the bank feed — no UTR, no credit, by design.1–2 min
3. Balance creditedFunds appear in your panel wallet. Log in and confirm the figure before staking.5–10 min
4. Bets settleMarkets settle against the official result — usually minutes after the match, though rain-rule and abandoned-game verdicts can hold a market for an hour or two.5–30 min post-match
5. Withdrawal requestedMessage the amount plus your UPI ID or account details in the same chat. No forms.1 min
6. Payout landsFull amount, no deductions, with its own UTR you can verify in your bank statement. IPL-night peaks stretch this to ~45 min; late-night NEFT waits for the next bank window.15–30 min

Two habits worth stealing from traders: keep a one-line log of every UTR (date, amount, direction — ten seconds per entry), and make your first withdrawal a small one within the first week. You're not cashing out; you're testing the pipe while your exposure is ₹300, not ₹30,000. Every payment dispute I've seen resolved fast was resolved because the player had the UTR ready.

Limits, Odds Formats & Session Rates — a Quick Decoder

Stakes: minimum ₹100 on most markets, ₹300 minimum deposit. Upper limits are liquidity-driven rather than house-imposed — an IPL match-winner market will absorb lakhs, a domestic one-dayer won't. If a single stake matters to you, watch the matched amount at your price before committing.

Decimal odds: the panel quotes European decimals. Back CSK at 1.85 with ₹1,000 and a win returns ₹1,850 total — ₹850 profit before the 2–5% commission on net winnings. Lay odds mirror this: laying at 1.85 risks ₹850 to win ₹1,000. Ten minutes on a demo ID and this becomes muscle memory.

Session (fancy) rates: here the panel switches dialects. A 10-over session shows something like "62–64" — meaning you can bet under 62 runs at one rate or over 64 at another, usually at 90–100 paisa (₹90–100 won per ₹100 staked). This is the khaiwal-era quoting style surviving inside the exchange, and it trips up everyone raised on decimals. The numbers move ball by ball, and wicket-fall suspensions are instant — don't chase a rate that's already gone.

Converting between the two dialects takes one line of arithmetic: a paisa rate divided by 100, plus one, is the decimal price. So 90 paisa is 1.90, 85 paisa is 1.85, and the "100 paisa" you'll see on hot session lines is even money — 2.00. Commission works the other way round: it's charged on your net winnings per market, not per bet. Win ₹850 and lose ₹400 in the same market and a 3% commission applies to the ₹450 difference — ₹13.50, not ₹37.50. Players who don't know this consistently overestimate what the platform takes.

You'll see all of this live once you're in: create your ID, or sign in if you already hold one and watch a session market for an over or two before staking. It's the cheapest education in betting.

Reading the Panel Like a Trader — a Worked Example

Theory only gets you so far, so let me walk two real situations the way they play out on screen. Neither is a tip — both teams and numbers are illustrative — but the mechanics are exactly what your ID will show you.

A 10-over session, ball by ball

Delhi bat first; the 10-over session opens at 78–80. You think the pitch is slower than the market does, so you take under 78 with ₹1,000 at 95 paisa — meaning a Delhi powerplay-plus-two of 77 or fewer pays you ₹950 profit; 78 or more costs your ₹1,000. Over three: a 16-run over, and the bracket jumps to 84–86 within two balls. Over five: wicket. The market suspends for eight seconds — that lockout at every dismissal is normal, not a glitch — and reopens at 76–78. By over ten Delhi sit at 74, and your position settles green moments after the ball is bowled. The lesson isn't the win; it's the movement. Session brackets are living numbers that reprice ball by ball, and the trader's discipline is taking the number you planned, not the one adrenaline offers you after a big over.

A full match-day with one ID

Morning: check lineups and pitch reports, top up ₹2,000 by UPI, UTR shared, balance confirmed before lunch. Toss (7:00 pm): the toss market settles instantly — it's the fastest settlement on the panel. First innings: you back Mumbai at 2.10 pre-toss; when they win the toss and bowl, the price shortens to 1.80 and you lay the same stake, locking a profit whichever side wins. That back-to-lay loop is the whole art of exchange trading, and it's only possible because one ID holds both sides. Post-match: winnings settle by 11:15 pm, withdrawal requested at 11:20, ₹3,400 lands at 11:47 with its own UTR. And the honest coda: some nights the price moves against you and there is no lay that saves the position. The budget you set before the toss is the only guardrail that works — set it when you're calm, honour it when you're not.

Market Rules That Decide Disputes

Most "the panel cheated me" complaints I've refereed in trading groups dissolve once you read the settlement rules the player never opened. The ones that matter in cricket:

  • Rain and DLS: match-winner markets settle on the official result, including a DLS-adjusted one. A five-over shootout counts the same as a full game. Session markets are different — if the quoted overs aren't completed, the session voids and stakes return.
  • Abandoned or no-result games: match markets void, everyone's stake comes back. Toss and any completed sessions stand, because their outcomes already happened.
  • Super overs: the market follows the tournament's official winner — the super-over victor takes it, whatever the scorecard drama.
  • Player props: settled on official scorer data, not the graphic your streaming app showed three balls late. If a batter retires hurt, most runs-based props on that player void rather than settle short.
  • Obvious-error (palpable) rule: a session briefly quoted at an impossible number — say 12–14 for a 10-over T20 powerplay — can be voided by the desk even after matching. Annoying when you're on the right side of it; protection when you're not.

The full set lives on the terms and conditions page, and reading the settlement section once will save you at least one bad evening. It's four minutes. Do it before the money is live, because afterwards you'll read it angry.

Cricket Betting ID — FAQ

What is a cricket betting ID?

It's a login for an exchange or bookie panel that lets you stake on cricket markets — match winner, sessions, toss, player props. On an exchange like KingExchange, one ID covers every format: IPL, internationals, T20 leagues and domestic cricket, all from a single wallet.

Is a cricket betting ID the same as a satta ID?

In everyday speech, yes — "satta ID" is the colloquial umbrella term. Technically they differ: old-school satta runs through a khaiwal who quotes bhav and settles personally from his ledger, while an exchange ID matches you against other users at transparent decimal odds, with commission charged only on net winnings.

Which cricket formats can I bet on with one ID?

All of them — IPL and the major T20 leagues (BBL, PSL, CPL, SA20), Tests, ODIs, T20Is, women's cricket and listed domestic tournaments. If IPL is your sole focus, the dedicated IPL betting ID page covers that tournament's markets and strategy in depth.

How do withdrawals work, and what is a UTR number?

Message the desk with the amount and your UPI or bank details; the payout lands in 15–30 minutes on a normal day, with no deductions. The UTR is the unique 12-digit reference every UPI/IMPS transaction carries — the desk verifies deposits against it, and you should save yours for every transaction as bank-grade proof of payment.

What's the minimum deposit and minimum stake?

₹300 minimum deposit via UPI, IMPS or bank transfer; ₹100 minimum stake on most markets, occasionally higher on session lines during marquee matches. You must be 18 or older to hold an ID — that rule has no exceptions.

Written by Abhishek — Cricket Trading Analyst. Abhishek has traded exchange cricket markets since 2019 and writes about session strategy, odds behaviour and payment mechanics.
Last reviewed: 10 July 2026