The Kerala Story 2 Box Office Verdict Is Out: From Week 1 to Week 2 — Audience Demand Analyzed
From Week 1 to Week 2 — What The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond’s 14 Days Box Office Performance Says About Its Run
Thought the sequel was done after a slow start? Think again. We decode the shocking Day 5 jump and the 14-day Box Office run of The Kerala Story 2.
It is Friday morning, March 13, 2026, here in Khardaha, West Bengal, and the theatrical dust has finally settled on the two-week run of The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond. The verdict is loud and clear. The film wrapped up its 14-day run with an India net collection of ₹40.31 crore against a very tightly controlled budget of ₹30 crore. It raked in a worldwide gross of ₹47.52 crore.
The overall footfalls stand at a solid 23.18 lakh. It is not breaking any historic all-time records. It is simply holding its ground, making its money, and emerging as a profitable venture for everyone involved.
The Burden Of A Controversial Sequel
Let us talk about why these numbers matter so much.
The Kerala Story 2: Goes BeyondDay 14
Kamakhya Narayan Singh took over the director’s chair for this spiritual sequel. The first part was an absolute mammoth at the ticket windows. The expectations were insanely high. This time the narrative shifted focus to a pan-India setting covering stories from different states. You change the director. You change the core geography. You bring in fresh faces like Ulka Gupta and Aditi Bhatia. That is a massive creative and financial risk.
The industry was whispering that lightning does not strike twice. The audience was highly skeptical. Sequels of controversial narrative-driven social dramas usually crash and burn if the emotional connect is missing. The producers played a very smart game here. They kept the budget locked at just 30 crore. That right there is a masterclass in risk management in today’s unpredictable box office climate.
There is a strange narrative floating around on social media right now.
People assume that if a sequel does not cross the 100-crore mark, it is an absolute disaster. Is a film a failure just because it did not match its predecessor’s historic anomaly? The current mood is extremely polarized. Some people are celebrating it as a massive hit because of the return on investment.

Others are completely writing it off because the opening day was low. The truth is much more grounded. A film made on 30 crore collecting over 40 crore net in two weeks is a decent success. It is a profitable venture.
Tracking The Holiday Magic And Weekend Jumps
Let us look at how the numbers actually behaved because the day-wise trend is fascinating. The movie opened on Friday, February 27, with a very dull ₹1.1 crore. Panic buttons were definitely pressed in the trade circles. Then came Saturday. The film registered a massive 326.36% jump, minting ₹4.69 crore. Sunday held the fort with ₹4.5 crore. The real test for any film is always the first Monday. Day 4 saw a drop to ₹2.65 crore. A 41.11% drop from Sunday is actually a very steady hold for a regular working day. The picture was slowly getting clearer.
Then absolute magic happened on Day 5. Tuesday brought in ₹3.85 crore. That is a massive 45.28% jump on a weekday. The walk-in audience in mass pockets fired up the numbers. You could see the occupancy reflecting this surge perfectly. According to BoxOfficeWala tracking, the overall Hindi occupancy on that Day 5 jumped to 17.62%.
Mumbai recorded a massive 27.3% occupancy and the National Capital Region stood at 15.8%. Ahmedabad contributed heavily with an 18.5% occupancy rate. The film essentially squeezed a second Sunday out of the week.
The second weekend sealed the deal for the makers. After a decent Thursday collection of ₹2.7 crore, the film collected ₹2.65 crore on its second Friday. It jumped again by 41.51% on Saturday to collect ₹3.75 crore. Bengaluru showed a crazy 28.3% evening occupancy that Saturday.
Sunday brought in another ₹3.31 crore. The weekdays of week two saw the usual logical drops. The collections fell to ₹1.76 crore on Monday. It hovered around the ₹2 crore mark on Tuesday and Wednesday. The second week closed on Thursday with ₹1.55 crore. Add all this up and the math looks beautiful. The footfall estimation sits at around 20.16 lakh tickets sold in India alone.
The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond Box Office Collection Breakdown
| Day | Date | India Net (₹ Cr) | India Gross (₹ Cr) | % Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day 01 | 27/02/2026 | 1.1 Cr | 1.29 Cr | - |
| Day 02 | 28/02/2026 | 4.69 Cr | 5.53 Cr | +326.36% |
| Day 03 | 01/03/2026 | 4.5 Cr | 5.31 Cr | -4.05% |
| Day 04 | 02/03/2026 | 2.65 Cr | 3.13 Cr | -41.11% |
| Day 05 | 03/03/2026 | 3.85 Cr | 4.55 Cr | +45.28% |
| Day 06 | 04/03/2026 | 3.65 Cr | 4.3 Cr | -5.19% |
| Day 07 | 05/03/2026 | 2.7 Cr | 3.18 Cr | -26.03% |
| Day 08 | 06/03/2026 | 2.65 Cr | 3.12 Cr | -1.85% |
| Day 09 | 07/03/2026 | 3.75 Cr | 4.42 Cr | +41.51% |
| Day 10 | 08/03/2026 | 3.31 Cr | 3.9 Cr | -11.73% |
| Day 11 | 09/03/2026 | 1.76 Cr | 2.07 Cr | -46.83% |
| Day 12 | 10/03/2026 | 2.05 Cr | 2.42 Cr | +16.48% |
| Day 13 | 11/03/2026 | 2.1 Cr | 2.47 Cr | +2.44% |
| Day 14 | 12/03/2026 | 1.55 Cr | 1.83 Cr | -26.19% |
| TOTAL COLLECTION | - | ₹40.31 Cr | ₹47.52 Cr | - |
📊 Collection Analysis: Yet to be added
The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond has collected 40.31 Net and 47.52 Gross in India. With a budget of ₹30 Cr, the film has recovered its costs. The current verdict is marked as Yet to be added.
What Lies Ahead For The Franchise
This 14-day trajectory sets a very clear path for the third week. The film has survived the crucial opening weeks and secured its profit margin.
Now it enters the bonus phase. With a lack of major competition until the next big tentpole arrives, it will continue to churn out small but significant numbers from tier-2 and tier-3 single screens. The distributors are safe. The makers have their plus verdict. The conversation now shifts to how its eventual digital premiere will perform because the theatrical job is completely done and dusted.
The Final Word
As an analyst I see this as a big win for mid-budget cinema.
You do not need a 100-crore budget to tell a compelling story and make money. Keeping the costs tight saved this film from becoming a theatrical failure after that scary opening day. It proves that audience word-of-mouth still dictates the long run.
Do you think the makers should continue this franchise with a third part or should they explore a completely new subject next?
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