Border 2 Box Office Collections Day 4
‘Border 2’ clocked a massive estimated ₹59 crore India net on Day 4 by sacnilk, taking its four‑day India total to around ₹180 crore and worldwide to about ₹239–239.4 crore by sacnilk.
For a Monday, that number would already be impressive, but this was Republic Day, and the national holiday turned into a full‑blown box office wave rather than just a gentle bump.
Trade trackers note that this is the film’s highest single‑day haul so far, which is slightly funny when remembering how sequels often struggle to match nostalgic hype; here, the sequel is behaving more like a peak‑holiday event film than a cautious follow‑up.
What really stands out is the occupancy: in Hindi, Day 4 clocked around 64 percent overall, with afternoon and evening shows flirting with 80 percent fills in many centres, a clear sign that family crowds and youth audiences showed up in big numbers once the flag hoisting was done.
The combination of patriotic mood, a long weekend, and Sunny Deol’s war‑drama image has clearly clicked, and early weekday trends suggest Border 2 is not just chasing records, but comfortably settling into blockbuster territory.
‘Border 2’ Box Office Collections Day‑wise
‘Border 2’ has built its box office story step by step, with each day of the opening weekend climbing sharply before exploding on Day 4.
The first three days already delivered a strong trend: healthy growth on Saturday, a big jump on Sunday, and then a holiday‑powered Monday that pushed the numbers into “talk of the town” range.
Here’s the simple day‑wise picture using the figures you referenced (India net, all languages):
|
Day |
India net collection |
Change vs previous day |
|---|---|---|
|
Day 1 (Friday) |
₹30 crore |
– |
|
Day 2 (Saturday) |
₹36.5 crore |
+21.67% |
|
Day 3 (Sunday) |
₹54.5 crore |
+49.32% |
|
Day 4 (Monday / Republic Day) |
₹59 crore |
+8.26% |
|
Total (4 days) |
₹180 crore |
– |
Over four days, that gives:
-
India net: about ₹180 crore by sacnilk.
-
India gross: roughly ₹212–212.4 crore by sacnilk.
-
Overseas: around ₹27 crore by sacnilk.
-
Worldwide gross: about ₹239–239.4 crore by sacnilk.
For context, some trade reports peg slightly different day‑wise nets (₹56–60 crore range on Day 4 and totals in the ₹177–190 crore band), but all agree that Border 2 has delivered one of the biggest Republic Day frames in recent memory.
It is the kind of run that has exhibitors talking about extended shows, extra late‑night screenings, and that familiar sight of people hunting for last‑minute tickets outside single screens.
About ‘Border 2’
‘Border 2’ is a large‑scale war drama set around the 1971 Indo‑Pak conflict, designed very much as a patriotic big‑screen experience for the Republic Day 2026 window.
Sunny Deol returns to the battlefield alongside a younger ensemble of stars, including Varun Dhawan, Diljit Dosanjh, and Ahan Shetty, with the film directed by Anurag Singh and backed by producers Bhushan Kumar, Krishan Kumar, JP Dutta, and Nidhi Dutta.
The story follows three friends from the National War Academy who go on to serve in different wings of the armed forces Army, Air Force and Navy only to find themselves drawn into parallel fronts of the 1971 war, while their former trainer, played by Sunny Deol, holds the line on another crucial sector.
That setup naturally lends itself to cross‑cutting between land, air and sea operations, and early audience chatter has highlighted exactly that: big action stretches, emotional payoffs, and plenty of throwback patriotic moments designed for whistles and claps in packed theatres.
With a release date of 23 January 2026, timed strategically for the extended Republic Day weekend, Border 2 has managed to turn high expectations into actual ticket sales something not every nostalgia‑driven sequel manages to pull off.
If the hold beyond Day 4 remains even moderately strong, the film is on track not just to pass the ₹200‑crore mark quickly in India, but to stay in the conversation as one of early 2026’s defining box office stories.
Disclaimer
Box office figures for Border 2, including day‑wise, India net, overseas and worldwide numbers, are based on industry estimates, trade reports and early tracking data. Final totals may change after official declarations. Readers should treat these numbers as approximate and cross‑check with updated trade sources where needed.




