· 7 min read

Women's Cricket in 2026: Why the Game Is Growing Fast and How to Get Involved

2026 might be the most important year in the history of women's cricket. Attendance records, new franchise leagues, and a surge in grassroots participation signal a permanent shift — not a trend.

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The numbers are remarkable. Women’s cricket participation has grown by over 40% globally in the last three years. The ICC Women’s T20 World Cup in 2024 drew record TV audiences. The Women’s Premier League (WPL) in India is filling stadiums. In Australia, the WBBL regularly outdraws men’s BBL in social media engagement.

At club and grassroots level, the shift is equally real. Junior girls’ programs are oversubscribed. Senior women’s teams are forming in clubs that never had them. And those teams — just like any other — need reliable scorekeepers.

Why Women’s Cricket Is Growing So Fast in 2026

1. More Professional Leagues, More Visibility

The Women’s Premier League (India), The Hundred Women’s competition (England), WBBL (Australia), and a newly expanded Caribbean Women’s Premier League have created a global professional circuit that didn’t exist five years ago. Players who once had no path to earning income from cricket now have multiple options — and that visibility trickles down to grassroots participation.

2. ICC Investment in Expansion

The ICC’s cricket pathway programs are actively adding women’s cricket in nations where the sport was exclusively male until recently. Full membership and associate status now require nations to have active women’s programs. The number of countries fielding women’s teams has doubled since 2020.

3. School and Junior Programs

In England, Australia, and South Africa, school cricket programs have made women’s participation a key metric. Girls who play at school convert to club membership at much higher rates than a decade ago — the pipeline is healthier than ever.

4. Social Media and Fan Culture

Beth Mooney, Smriti Mandhana, Nat Sciver-Brunt, and Shafali Verma have built genuine followings independent of men’s cricket. Young players follow their idols and want to play. Social media has made women’s cricket aspirational in a way broadcast TV alone couldn’t achieve.

Scoring Rules: Are Women’s and Men’s Matches Different?

The laws of cricket are the same for women’s and men’s cricket. The same scoring rules apply: extras, wicket types, overs, run rates, and dismissals are identical. The main format differences are practical:

  • Ball size: Women’s cricket uses a slightly smaller ball (132–139g vs 155.9–163g for men). This doesn’t affect scoring.
  • Pitch length: Same full 22 yards at senior level.
  • Over formats: Women’s international cricket is played across Tests, ODIs (50 overs), and T20Is. Domestic leagues vary — WBBL plays 10-over matches in some early rounds.
  • Fielding restrictions: Same powerplay and fielding circle rules as men’s cricket.

If you can score a men’s match, you can score a women’s match. The app works identically.

How Clubs Can Support Women’s Cricket

Form a Women’s Team

Many clubs assume they need a full 11 committed players before starting. In practice, clubs that post a simple “women’s team forming” message on their social media often find 15–20 interested players within days. Start with practice sessions, then enter a local competition.

Train Scorers for Women’s Matches

Women’s matches often go unscored because the club’s usual scorer is occupied with the men’s first XI at the same time. Train two or three members of the women’s team itself to score using a phone app — CricPulse takes about 15 minutes to learn and removes the dependency on a dedicated scorer.

Share Scorecards Publicly

One of the biggest disparities between men’s and women’s cricket at club level is visibility. Men’s match results get posted; women’s don’t, or go up days later. With CricPulse, a scorecard link is available the moment the match ends — making it just as easy to share women’s results as men’s.

Track Player Development

Women entering club cricket for the first time deserve the same statistical record as men who’ve played for years. CricPulse tracks every player’s career from their first match — batting averages, strike rates, bowling figures — building a historical record that has value for player development, selection, and self-motivation.

Key Women’s Cricket Events to Watch in 2026

  • ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 — scheduled for later this year; expanded to 12 teams
  • Women’s Premier League Season 3 — already underway in India with record broadcast deals
  • The Hundred Women’s 2026 — England’s most watched domestic women’s competition enters its fifth year
  • WBBL 12 — Australia’s Big Bash League Women’s season begins October 2026

For club scorers and organisers, these events are an opportunity: every ICC tournament week generates a surge in searches for cricket scoring apps, cricket rules, and how to get involved in cricket. It’s the right moment to launch that women’s team, run that extra training session, and make sure your club shows up when people look for how to play.

Score the Next Generation of Women’s Cricket

CricPulse is used by clubs across Australia, England, India, South Africa, and the Caribbean to score both men’s and women’s cricket. The same ball-by-ball accuracy, the same offline reliability, the same free access — for every team, every match, every player.

Download CricPulse and help make women’s cricket just as well-documented as men’s cricket at your club.

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