This was the first season of the IPL to use
DRS. IPL Fanpark, an initiative where matches are hosted in stadia on a large screen has been planned to be held across 36 cities in 19 states across the India. This season also introduced mid-season transfers. The
transfer window will be a short five-day transfer window applicable only for uncapped players who have played not more than two matches at the halfway mark of the tournament.
Format Eight teams were scheduled to play in 2018. The tournament involved each team playing every other team twice in a
home-and-away, double
round-robin format. At the conclusion of the double round-robin league, the top four teams on the basis of aggregate points qualified for the
playoffs. In this stage, the top two teams compete with each other (in a match titled "Qualifier 1"), as do the remaining two teams (in a match titled "Eliminator"). While the winner of Qualifier 1 directly qualified for the final match, the losing team got another chance to qualify for the final match by playing the winning team of the Eliminator match; this match is titled Qualifier 2. The winner of this subsequent Qualifier 2 match moved onto the final match. The team that won the final match was crowned the Indian Premier League winners. The schedule for the tournament was published on 14 February 2018.
Broadcast Star Sports won the global media rights at ₹16,347.5 crore ($2.55 billion) for five years starting from 2018. For the first time, IPL would also be broadcast on public broadcaster
Doordarshan. The television rights for rest of the world were won by
Willow TV for US and Canada,
Sky Sports for UK,
Fox Sports for Australia,
Sky Sport for New Zealand,
SuperSport for sub Saharan Africa,
beIN Sports for Middle-East and North America,
Flow TV for Caribbean,
Geo Super for Pakistan,
Channel 9 for Bangladesh and
Lemar TV for Afghanistan. == Venues ==