KheloMore referral code and invite notes for Indian players
Referral codes on KheloMore turn a friend sign-up into a small credit on both sides, but only when both sides actually plan to book. This page explains how the invite flow works, where the credit lands, what it can be spent on, and what usually goes wrong when a referral is forced.
What this page covers
This page is structured so each section can be read on its own. The first sections explain what to look for, the middle sections walk through the practical checks, and the closing sections address common questions raised by Indian parents, players, and team managers who use KheloMore.
The honest test for any referral code is whether both sides would book anyway. If yes, the referral is a small win for both. If no, the credit is small and the friction is large, and the friendship takes a hit that the credit cannot repair.
Referral credits, like wallet balance, are usually not the same as cash. They expire, they apply to specific sports, and they cannot always be withdrawn. Treat them as sport-specific credit, not as a saving in the bank.
How a KheloMore referral usually works


A user shares their referral code or invite link from the account screen. The new user installs the app, signs up, and enters the code during sign-up or on the first booking screen. Both sides see a credit after the conditions are met.
Conditions usually include a verified phone number, a verified email, a first payment, and sometimes a minimum booking value. Reading those conditions before sharing the code prevents the surprise of a credit that does not appear because a step was missed.
Credits are usually applied to the wallet, not refunded to the original payment method. That is an important distinction: the credit helps future bookings, not past ones. Spending it on a slot the user actually wants is the right move.
Who actually qualifies as a new user
New user usually means a phone number or device that has not booked on KheloMore before. Signing up with a second number to claim a second referral credit usually violates the terms and can lead to a credit reversal.
Family members on the same device may or may not qualify, depending on the platform's definition. Reading the new-user terms before the family member signs up prevents the disappointment of a credit that never arrives.
Old users who delete the app and reinstall do not usually qualify as new users. The platform tracks device and phone, not just the account name.
Where the credit lands and what it can buy


Most referral credits land in the wallet on the account screen. The wallet balance can then be applied to a future booking, subject to the wallet terms.
Credits are usually sport-specific or category-specific. A cricket credit may not apply to a badminton booking, and a venue credit may not apply to a class booking. The credit description on the wallet screen is the source of truth.
Expiry is the most overlooked detail. A credit that expires in thirty days is useful only if the user is planning a booking in the next thirty days. Otherwise, the credit is a small disappointment, not a saving.
Common mistakes users report
Sharing the code with someone who is not actually going to book, then following up repeatedly. The right move is to share the code once and let the other person decide on their own schedule.
Assuming the credit will apply automatically to the next booking. Some credits require a manual opt-in or a specific code entry on the booking screen. Reading the wallet screen avoids that surprise.
Treating the referral credit as a discount on the first booking. Most platforms credit the wallet, which then applies to a future booking, not the current one. Budgeting for the first booking at full price prevents a cash crunch.
Sharing the code on public posts. Some referral programs flag public sharing as spam. Private sharing through a chat or a message is usually safer.
When referral credits are worth the effort


A referral credit is worth the effort when both sides book weekly. In that case, the credit pays for one session for each side within a few weeks, and the relationship is preserved.
A referral credit is not worth the effort when one side would book once and then stop. The credit is too small to matter, and the nudge to book feels like pressure.
A referral credit is also not worth the effort when the sport, city, or timing does not match the new user's routine. A forced referral is a wasted referral.
Reading referral terms carefully
Most referral terms specify the eligible sports, the eligible cities, the minimum booking value, the expiry of the credit, and the single-use rule. All five should be read before sharing the code.
Some referral programs exclude premium batches or premium venues. A credit that does not apply to the slot the user actually wants is a credit on paper only.
Family programs sometimes allow family members to refer each other; sometimes they do not. Reading the family rule before signing up a spouse or a child prevents an awkward reversal later.
What the credit looks like on the wallet screen
The wallet screen usually lists each credit as a separate line, with the source (referral, coupon, platform promotion), the amount, the eligible sport or category, and the expiry. A credit that does not appear on the wallet screen has not been credited yet, regardless of what the invite flow said.
Wallet credits do not stack with each other unless the platform says so. Two referral credits usually cannot be applied to the same booking, even if both are active. Reading the wallet terms prevents the assumption that two credits equal one larger credit.
Wallet credits that are about to expire usually show a different colour or a small icon. Reviewing the wallet screen once a month is a small habit that prevents a small disappointment.
What to do when the credit does not appear
Wait for the booking condition to be met first. A credit that requires a first payment will not appear until the payment is processed and the booking is confirmed.
If the credit still does not appear after the condition is met, screenshot the booking and the invite screen, and contact KheloMore support with both accounts visible. Support usually resolves within three business days.
If the credit is reversed later for any reason, the reversal usually shows up on the wallet screen with a small note. Reading the note carefully is the fastest way to understand whether the reversal can be appealed.
Common questions
Does this page list official KheloMore referral codes?
No. Referral codes are personal to each user and should be obtained from the account screen on the official KheloMore app, not from a third-party listing.
Can a referral credit be withdrawn as cash?
Usually no. Most referral credits land in the wallet and apply to future bookings, subject to the wallet terms. Withdrawal to a bank account is rare.
What if my friend signs up but the credit does not appear?
Wait for the booking condition to be met first. If the credit still does not appear after the booking, screenshot the booking and contact KheloMore support with both accounts visible.
Can I refer the same friend twice?
Usually no. Most platforms allow one referral per new user, and the new user is identified by phone number or device, not just by name.
Does the referral credit expire?
Usually yes. Most credits carry a thirty- to ninety-day expiry. The expiry is shown on the wallet screen next to the credit.
Can I refer family members?
Family programs vary. Some platforms allow spouse or child referrals; others treat them as the same household and disallow. The terms on the referral screen are the source of truth.
