It appears CashKaro doesn’t publicize a fixed “maximum cashback limit” per transaction or per day when you use Flipkart — but there are a few relevant points worth knowing:
- On Flipkart purchases via CashKaro you typically get a cashback or “rewards” offer (often shown as “up to 7%” cashback) depending on the sale/offers.
- Once cashback or rewards are confirmed and your total confirmed amount reaches ₹250, you become eligible to withdraw (or redeem) it.
- There is no published cap mentioned by CashKaro that says “you cannot earn more than X rupees cashback” for Flipkart overall — cashback depends on the order amount and offer rate.
✅ What we know about CashKaro + Flipkart cashback
On the CashKaro store page for Flipkart, the cashback (or “Rewards”) rate is shown as “up to 7%” on eligible orders.
Cashback/Rewards you earn are first marked “Pending,” then become “Confirmed” once the order is validated by the merchant.
You can withdraw (or redeem) your confirmed balance — either to your bank account via NEFT, or as gift cards (e.g. Flipkart or Amazon) — once your confirmed amount reaches at least ₹ 250.
Cashback/Rewards entries expire if you don’t log in to your CashKaro account for 2 years.
⚠️ What is not specified (i.e. no cap)
CashKaro’s public documentation and FAQs do not mention a “maximum total cashback” limit (like per month / per year / lifetime) that a user can earn through Flipkart or any other store.
There is no mention of a cap on number of times you can use Cashback-enabled links.
There is no explicit upper limit on amount per transaction (other than the usual: cashback is calculated on “order value after deducting Supercoins and other charges,” and certain categories might be excluded).
๐ Conclusion
As per available public information (2025): there is no defined cap on how much cashback/rewards you can earn overall via CashKaro when shopping on Flipkart. Your earnings are limited only by your purchases (what you buy, how often, order value) and whether cashback offer applies to that order.
If you like — I can also try to dig up user reports or community-thread data (Reddit, forums etc.) to see if people have experienced any effective limits (for example: declined cashback after many orders).