All you need to know about the Women's T20 World Cup

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ByKatharine Sharpe
BBC Sport senior journalist
  • Published

England is hosting the 2026 T20 Women's World Cup this summer, with 12 teams competing for the trophy.

The first edition of the tournament took part in 2009 and has since become a biennial fixture, other than a postponement from 2020 to 2023 because of the Covid pandemic.

New Zealand's White Ferns are reigning champions, winning their first title in the 2024 tournament.

Here is all you need to know about the 2026 tournament, which begins on Friday, 12 June.

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Amy Jones of England catches from Harmanpreet Kaur of IndiaImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

England will hope to capitalise on home advantage for this year's competition

Which countries are taking part?

This is the first year that 12 teams will feature in the tournament, with nine countries participating in the inaugural event in 2009, increasing to 10 from 2014.

That number will increase further to 16 teams from 2030.

Australia have the best record, having won it six times, with England, the West Indies and New Zealand each holding one title.

The teams in order of T20 International ranking are:

  • Australia - 1st

  • England - 2nd

  • India - 3rd

  • New Zealand - 4th

  • South Africa - 5th

  • West Indies - 6th

  • Sri Lanka - 7th

  • Pakistan - 8th

  • Ireland - 9th

  • Bangladesh - 10th

  • Scotland - 11th

  • Netherlands - 14th

England qualified automatically as tournament hosts.

The next spots were given to the five highest-finishing teams from the 2024 World Cup, which were New Zealand, South Africa, Australia, India and the West Indies.

Sri Lanka and Pakistan qualified through the ICC Women's T20I team rankings in 2024.

Bangladesh, Ireland, the Netherlands and Scotland secured the final four spots at the 2026 T20 World Cup qualifier in January and February.

What is the format?

The 12 teams have been split into two groups of six, with everyone playing each other once.

The top two teams from each group progress to the semi-finals, with the final being held at Lord's in London on 5 July.

Group 1

  • Australia

  • Bangladesh

  • India

  • Netherlands

  • Pakistan

  • South Africa

Group 2

  • England

  • Ireland

  • New Zealand

  • Scotland

  • Sri Lanka

  • West Indies

What are the venues?

Seven grounds around England have been selected for the matches.

  • Lord's, London - 31,100 capacity

  • The Oval, London - 27,500 capacity

  • Old Trafford, Manchester - 26,000 capacity

  • Edgbaston, Birmingham - 25,000 capacity

  • Hampshire Bowl, Southampton - 25,000 capacity

  • Headingley, Leeds - 18,350 capacity

  • Bristol County Ground, Bristol - 17,500 capacity

What is the schedule?

There will be a total of 31 fixtures:

Friday, 12 June

  • England v Sri Lanka

Saturday, 13 June

  • Scotland v Ireland

  • Australia v South Africa

  • West Indies v New Zealand

Sunday, 14 June

  • Bangladesh v Netherlands

  • India v Pakistan

Tuesday, 16 June

  • New Zealand v Sri Lanka

  • England v Ireland

Wednesday, 17 June

  • Australia v Bangladesh

  • India v Netherlands

  • South Africa v Pakistan

Thursday, 18 June

  • West Indies v Scotland

Friday, 19 June

  • New Zealand v Ireland

Saturday, 20 June

  • Australia v Netherlands

  • Pakistan v Bangladesh

  • England v Scotland

Sunday, 21 June

  • West Indies v Sri Lanka

  • South Africa v India

Tuesday, 23 June

  • New Zealand v Scotland

  • Sri Lanka v Ireland

  • Australia v Pakistan

Wednesday, 24 June

  • England v West Indies

Thursday, 25 June

  • India v Bangladesh

  • South Africa v Netherlands

Friday, 26 June

  • Sri Lanka v Scotland

Saturday, 27 June

  • Pakistan v Netherlands

  • West Indies v Ireland

  • England v New Zealand

Sunday, 28 June

  • South Africa v Bangladesh

  • Australia v India

Tuesday, 30 June

  • Semi-final

Thursday, 2 July

  • Semi-final

Sunday, 5 July

  • Final

What is the prize money?

The prize pot for 2026 is $8.8m (£6.6m), a 10% increase on the 2024 tournament.

Minimum earnings for each country are set to be at a record level, with the minimum participation fee for all teams more than double what it was in 2024.

The flat fees for the winners, runners-up, losing semi-finalists and for each group-stage win will remain the same as 2024.

The 2024 edition's prize fund more than tripled from £1.84 million ($2.45 million) in 2023 to £5.92m ($7.96m), after the ICC decided to award equal prize money for the men's and women's tournaments.

How can I follow the Women's T20 World Cup on the BBC?

Every match will be broadcast live on BBC Test Match Special on BBC Sounds, BBC Sports Extra and the BBC Sport website and app.

There will also be live text commentaries with in-play clips, reports, highlights and features on the BBC Sport website and app.

This article is the latest from BBC Sport's Ask Me Anything team.

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