The 2025 ICC Women's Cricket World Cup is the 13th edition of Women's Cricket World Cup. It is being hosted jointly by India and Sri Lanka.[1] It is India's fourth time hosting the World Cup after the 1978, 1997 and 2013 editions, and Sri Lanka's first time hosting it. This is the last time the tournament will have eight teams.[2]Australia are the defending champions, having won their seventh title in 2022. In June 2025, the International Cricket Council announced the event will take place from 30 September to 2 November 2025.[3]
On 19 December 2024, following an agreement between the BCCI and PCB, the ICC confirmed that matches between India and Pakistan at ICC events in 2024–2027 will be played at neutral venues.[4]
Marketing
Before the commencement of the tournament, the ICC hosted a Trophy Tour, during which the trophy was taken to various locations across the four Indian host cities and in later to Colombo.[5][6] The tour began on 11 August in Mumbai. ICC Chairman Jay Shah, along with former cricketers Mithali Raj and Yuvraj Singh, and Indian cricketers Harmanpreet Kaur, Smriti Mandhana, and Jemimah Rodrigues, launched the Trophy Tour at a 50-day countdown event held in Mumbai.[7]
It was originally planned that matches would be played at five different Indian venues,[10][11] with the BCCI prioritising cities likely to enjoy favourable weather conditions and which were efficient in terms of transport and logistics.[12]
After Pakistan's qualification, it was agreed that their matches would be played outside India at a neutral venue,[13] and in June 2025, the ICC announced the final venues in India and Sri Lanka.[3] The cities of Bengaluru, Guwahati, Indore, and Visakhapatnam in India, and Colombo in Sri Lanka, were initially announced as venues,[14] although the following month the ICC replaced Bengaluru with the DY Patil Stadium in Navi Mumbai.[15]
One semi-final will be played at Navi Mumbai, with the other semi-final and final venues dependent on whether Pakistan progress to the final stages of the competition.
On 11 September 2025, the ICC appointed the officials for the tournament.[16][17] This was the first time that whole panel was lead by female officials.[18]
Each team will select a squad of 15 players.[19] On 19 August, India became the first team to announce their squad.[20] England announced their squad on 21 August 2025.[21] Bangladesh announced their squad on 23 August.[22] Pakistan announced their squad on 25 August.[23] South Africa announced their squad on 3 September.[24] Australia announced their squad on 5 September.[25] New Zealand announced their squad on 10 September.[26] Sri Lanka were the final team to announce their squad, doing so on 10 September.[27]
Prize money
Prize money – 2025 ICC Women's Cricket World Cup[28]
Stage
Teams
Prize money (USD)
Total (USD)
Winner
1
4,480,000
4,480,000
Runner-up
1
2,240,000
2,240,000
Semi-finalists
2
1,120,000
2,240,000
5th & 6th place
2
700,000
1,400,000
7th & 8th place
2
280,000
560,000
Group stage wins
24 (est.)
34,314
823,536
Participation fee
8
250,000
2,000,000
Total
13,880,000
The International Cricket Council (ICC) announced a prize fee of a total of $13.88 million.[29] This marks a 297% increase in the total prize pool compared to the USD 3.5 million announced for the 2022 edition in New Zealand, and even surpasses the total prize money of the 2023 Men's Cricket World Cup. The winner's purse of USD 4.48 million also exceeds the USD 4 million awarded in the men's 2023 edition, highlighting a landmark commitment to gender equity in cricket.[30]
Warm-up matches
Before the competition, teams were played in a series of warm-up matches between 25 and 28 September. These matches did not have either ODI or List A status.[31]
Note: The total points at the end of each group match are listed.
Note: Click on the points to see the match summary.
Fixtures
The International Cricket Council (ICC) announced the schedule of the tournament on 16 June 2025.[32] The revised schedule was announced on 22 August 2025.[15]
Outside the listed regions, all matches will also be available for streaming worldwide via the official broadcast channel on ICC.tv
Notes
↑ The official sole host for the tournament was India. Following an agreement between the BCCI and the PCB, the ICC confirmed Sri Lanka as hosts for all Pakistani matches as well as some Sri Lankan games.[14]
This page is based on this Wikipedia article Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.