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Combat

Kickboxing

Kickboxing is played and developed across India under the WAKO India, with grassroots programmes, state associations and national-level competition pathways.

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Overview

Governing body
WAKO India
Origin
1960s
Olympic discipline
No
Category
Combat
Total players listed

Kickboxing is one of India's most-followed disciplines. The WAKO India oversees national federation activity, talent identification and Olympic qualification pathways. Major support flows in through TOPS and Khelo India for athletes who clear federation benchmarks.

Kickboxing is not currently on the Olympic programme, but it sits firmly inside India's broader sporting ecosystem. The discipline receives support through the Khelo India movement, multi-sport events such as the National Games and Asian Games trials wherever the sport is contested, and dedicated league or championship structures run by the federation. Sponsorship, broadcast deals and private academies often fill the gap that direct government funding leaves, and several state governments offer cash awards, government jobs and land grants to medallists at the National Games and recognised world championships.

Combat sport pathways in India are unusually deep because of the country's traditional akhara and dojo culture sitting alongside the modern federation structure. The WAKO India runs sub-junior, junior, youth and senior nationals every year, and weight-category selection trials decide who represents India at continental and world events. Sports science, weight management and injury rehabilitation have become major focus areas since multiple Indian combat athletes have reached the Olympic and World Championship podium. SAI's combat-sport centres at Patiala, Lucknow, Bhopal, Sonepat and the IIS in Vijayanagar form the backbone of the elite training network.

At the grassroots, the route into Kickboxing typically starts at school under the School Games Federation of India (SGFI), at the inter-university level under the Association of Indian Universities (AIU), or through a private academy registered with the state association. The Khelo India Youth Games and Khelo India University Games are the largest single discovery platforms — athletes who reach the podium at these events become eligible for the Khelo India Talent Development scheme, which funds boarding, coaching, kit, education and a monthly stipend at accredited centres. State sports awards and central government jobs under the sports quota remain a powerful incentive for athletes from smaller towns.

Kickboxing originated in 1960s, and in India it has developed a distinct character shaped by the country's geography, demographics and sporting culture. Whether you want to compete, coach, sponsor, write about or simply follow Kickboxing, the practical starting point is the same: connect with your state association under the WAKO India, identify the nearest SAI centre or accredited academy, and track the Khelo India and federation calendars for the events that decide selection at every level. Kickboxing is played and developed across India under the WAKO India, with grassroots programmes, state associations and national-level competition pathways.

History

How kickboxing evolved globally and took root in India.

Kickboxing traces its modern origins to 1960s. Codified rules, standard equipment and international competition took shape as the sport spread beyond its birthplace, and WAKO India is the body that carried it into organised Indian competition.

In India, kickboxing grew through princely-state patronage, defence-service teams, universities and state associations. Post-independence, the discipline was formalised under WAKO India, national championships were instituted, and the Sports Authority of India (SAI) later brought it into the centralised high-performance system with dedicated centres, coaching cadres and sports-science support.

Kickboxing sits outside the Olympic programme but is firmly part of India's Asian Games, Commonwealth and National Games map, with state governments backing medallists through cash awards, jobs and land grants.

Indian Players

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Browse the full athlete directory →

Rules

Bouts are decided across a fixed number of rounds inside a ring, mat or cage, with victory by points, submission, technical superiority, knockout, disqualification or referee stoppage depending on the discipline. Weight categories are strictly enforced, weigh-ins are held before every event, and the referee has full authority to stop a bout for safety. WADA anti-doping and federation medical clearance apply at every level.

Authoritative rulebook: WAKO India. Age-group and school-level variations are published by SGFI and the state associations each season.

Positions

Key roles, events or positions inside a kickboxing squad or competition.

  • Fighter / competitor
    Contests bouts inside the ring, mat or cage in a set weight category.
  • Corner / second
    Coach in the corner during the bout — allowed to instruct between rounds.
  • Referee & judges
    Officiate the bout, score rounds and enforce safety rules.
  • Cutman / medical
    Manages cuts, swelling and immediate medical needs between rounds.

Equipment

Standard kit and infrastructure required to train and compete in kickboxing at a federation-recognised event.

  • Approved gloves, headguard, mouthguard, groin guard and shin/instep protection
  • Weight-class-appropriate singlet, gi, dobok or shorts
  • Wraps, tapes and cornerman kit
  • Weigh-in scale, timer and mat/ring/cage to federation spec
  • Medical and cutman supplies at every bout

Governing body

National federation
WAKO India

WAKO India is the recognised national body for Kickboxing in India. It sets the domestic calendar, selection norms, coaching curriculum and anti-doping compliance, and is affiliated to the international federation for kickboxing. State associations under WAKO India run age-group competition and feed the national talent pipeline.

Origin
1960s
Olympic
No
Category
Combat

Major Indian Events

Domestic championships, Khelo India events, National Games and franchise leagues that shape the kickboxing calendar in India.

  • WAKO India Senior National Championship

    The primary domestic kickboxing title and the main selection trial for the senior India team.

  • WAKO India Junior & Sub-Junior National Championship

    Age-group nationals that feed the Khelo India Talent Development scheme and the senior camp.

  • Khelo India Youth Games & University Games — Kickboxing

    India's largest multi-sport scouting platform; medallists become eligible for KIA stipends and boarding at accredited centres.

  • National Games of India — Kickboxing

    Quadrennial multi-sport meet contested by state teams; state governments give cash awards, jobs and land grants to medallists.

International Events

Continental and world-level competitions where India competes in kickboxing.

  • Asian Games & Asian Championships

    Continental championship pathway sanctioned by WAKO India; medallists receive central and state cash awards.

  • Commonwealth Games / Championships

    Commonwealth-level competition where India regularly fields medal contenders in kickboxing.

  • World Championships

    The senior world title event of the international federation — the peak of the kickboxing calendar outside the Olympic year.

Leagues

No dedicated professional league is currently catalogued for kickboxing. The national championship under WAKO India remains the top domestic competition.

All leagues →

International Players

Globally recognised kickboxing athletes to know outside India.

  • Mikaela Mayer (USA) / Naoya Inoue (Japan)
    World-title boxers headlining the current pro scene.
  • Islam Makhachev (Russia)
    UFC lightweight champion.
  • Zaur Uguev (Russia)
    Two-time Olympic and multiple-time World wrestling champion.
  • Kim Yu-Jin (South Korea)
    Olympic taekwondo gold medallist.
  • Uta Abe (Japan)
    Olympic and World judo champion.

Records

Where to find India's official kickboxing record book.

  • Olympic medalsN/A

    Kickboxing is not on the Olympic programme, so India records this discipline through Asian Games, Commonwealth, World and Continental championships instead.

  • Asian Games medalsTracked

    India's Asian Games results in kickboxing are compiled by the Indian Olympic Association and the WAKO India.

  • Commonwealth medalsTracked

    Commonwealth Games and Commonwealth Championship medals in kickboxing are maintained by the WAKO India.

  • World Championship medalsTracked

    Senior, junior and youth World Championship medal records are held by the international federation for kickboxing and mirrored by WAKO India.

  • National record holdersFederation register

    WAKO India publishes the current senior, junior and sub-junior national records and updates them after every ratified event.

Career Options

Ways to build a career in kickboxing — on the field, on the sidelines and behind the scenes.

  • National-camp athlete on TOPS with international competition support
  • Coach at SAI, private academy or dojo/akhara
  • Referee, judge and cornerman certified by the federation
  • Cutman, sports medicine and combat-specific physiotherapy
  • Government jobs via sports quota, defence and paramilitary intake
  • Fight promotion, MMA/boxing management and broadcast careers

Related academies

0 listed

No kickboxing academies are catalogued in the directory yet. Browse the full academy list or list your academy to appear here.

Government Schemes

Central and state schemes that fund training, stipends and awards for kickboxing athletes and academies.

Loading schemes…

All government schemes →

FAQs

Common questions about kickboxing in India.

Who governs Kickboxing in India?

WAKO India is the recognised national federation for Kickboxing in India. State associations under WAKO India run age-group and state-level competition and feed the national talent pipeline.

Is Kickboxing an Olympic sport?

Kickboxing is not currently on the Olympic programme, but India competes at Asian Games, Commonwealth Games (where recognised), World Championships and other continental events sanctioned by WAKO India.

How do I start playing Kickboxing in India?

Join a school team under SGFI, a college team under AIU, or a private academy affiliated to your state association. From there, age-group state championships and Khelo India events are the standard route into the national pipeline.

What government schemes support Kickboxing athletes?

The core schemes are Khelo India (talent development stipends, scholarships and boarding at accredited centres), TOPS (funding for elite athletes preparing for the Olympics, Asian Games and Commonwealth Games), and state-government cash awards, jobs and land grants for medallists. Federation-specific schemes may also apply.

Where can I train for Kickboxing?

Sports Authority of India (SAI) national centres of excellence, Khelo India accredited academies, state sports institutes and private academies registered with the state association are the standard training venues. The Academies section on this page lists options.

How are Indian Kickboxing athletes selected for international events?

WAKO India runs selection trials — typically the senior national championship, a dedicated trial event, or ranking-based selection — and publishes the selection policy each season. Objective criteria (times, distances, ranking points, weight-class results) dominate at the elite level.

Kickboxing in every state & UT

Dedicated pages for Kickboxing in each Indian state and Union Territory — academies, schemes, athletes and how to start.