Dhurandhar has officially crossed the Rs. 750 crore mark at the Indian box office, and remarkably, it has done so without showing even the slightest signs of fatigue. As the film powers through Week 4, its weekday collections continue to hold firm an increasingly rare phenomenon in today’s front-loaded theatrical environment. The Ranveer Singh-led spectacle is no longer just posting big numbers; it is redefining what sustained box office dominance looks like in modern Hindi cinema.


What makes this milestone especially significant is the timing. Most films, even the biggest blockbusters, begin to taper off sharply by the fourth week, with weekday collections often slipping into single digits. Dhurandhar, however, has flipped that trend on its head. The film has remained resolute through weekdays in Week 4, underlining the extraordinary audience pull it continues to command across mass belts and multiplexes alike. This consistency has propelled it past the Rs. 750 crore mark, placing it firmly among the most dominant theatrical runs the industry has witnessed.
Trade analysts are now closely watching the December 31, 2025 and January 1, 2026 window, a period that traditionally fuels footfalls due to year-end holidays, celebratory outings, and increased leisure viewing. For Dhurandhar, this festive corridor could prove to be another accelerant. With strong word-of-mouth still driving repeat audiences and group viewing, expectations are that the film will comfortably add significant numbers during this period, pushing it rapidly towards the Rs. 800 crore milestone.
What stands out is not just the scale of the collections, but the nature of the run. Dhurandhar has evolved into a full-fledged theatrical movement one where audience enthusiasm hasn’t cooled with time but has instead sustained momentum deep into its fourth week. This kind of box office behaviour is typically reserved for generational blockbusters, the kind that transcend release windows and calendar constraints.
At Rs. 754.50 crore and climbing, Dhurandhar is no longer chasing benchmarks it is creating new ones. If the current trend holds, and with the New Year surge acting as a catalyst, the march to ₹800 crore now feels less like a question of “if” and more a matter of “when.” The film’s box office journey continues to stand as a powerful reminder that when scale, content, and audience connection align, cinema doesn’t just open big it endures.

