Check the latest ICC Women’s ODI Batter Rankings 2026 with live batting ratings, recent movement and the leading 50-over batters in women’s cricket.
The women’s ODI batting table is built around ratings, not raw career totals. A batter can rise through a high-quality innings against strong opposition, a match-winning chase, or a consistent run across an ODI series. Smriti Mandhana currently leads the women’s ODI batting race with a 790 rating, with Laura Wolvaardt close behind on 782 and several Australian, English, Indian, New Zealand, West Indies and Pakistan batters grouped inside the leading positions.
| # | Team | Rating | Chg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 131 | - | |
| 2 | 119 | - | |
| 3 | 104 | - | |
| 4 | 102 | - | |
| 5 | 102 | - | |
| 6 | 86 | - | |
| 7 | 78 | - | |
| 8 | 75 | - | |
| 9 | 68 | - | |
| 10 | 10 | - |
Rankings are not available at present for this selection.
ODI batting rewards a different kind of excellence because an innings can last from the first powerplay to the final over. The best women’s ODI batters must build, rotate strike through long middle phases, handle spin for extended spells and still accelerate late. Openers such as Smriti Mandhana and Laura Wolvaardt are valuable because they can shape an innings from the start, while middle-order players such as Nat Sciver-Brunt, Beth Mooney and Harmanpreet Kaur bring control, finishing range and experience under pressure.
The ranking table should be read as a live form index. It is separate from career run charts. A retired great such as Mithali Raj remains the all-time ODI run leader, but current rankings belong to active players whose recent innings are still being counted in the rating system.
A women’s ODI batter ranking is a current ratings list, not a lifetime achievement table. The rating attached to each player reflects recent ODI batting value, the strength of the opposition and the context of each innings. A century in a chase, a score on a difficult pitch or a decisive knock in a series can carry more ranking value than a comfortable innings in a one-sided match.
That is why a player with fewer career runs can rank above a long-serving batter if her recent ODI output is stronger. In the current cycle, Smriti Mandhana, Laura Wolvaardt, Beth Mooney, Phoebe Litchfield, Nat Sciver-Brunt, Ashleigh Gardner, Maddy Green, Harmanpreet Kaur, Hayley Matthews and Sidra Amin form the kind of top-order group that shows how broad women’s ODI batting has become. The list includes left-hand openers, middle-order anchors, all-rounders and players who can switch tempo late in an innings.
ICC player ratings are based on performances in international ODIs. A batter earns rating value from her innings, and that value changes as newer performances replace older ones. The system gives greater importance to recent matches and adjusts for match situation, opposition quality and the overall value of the innings.
This is why rankings can move quickly after a short series. A player who scores heavily in two or three ODIs can climb several places, while another batter can drop if older high-value innings fall outside the active calculation window. The system is intended to show current quality in the format rather than simply reward the biggest career total.
The recent women’s ODI batting race has been shaped by three names more than most: Nat Sciver-Brunt, Laura Wolvaardt and Smriti Mandhana. Sciver-Brunt first reached No. 1 in July 2023 after a dominant Ashes ODI series and held strong periods at the top through 2023 and 2024. Wolvaardt reclaimed No. 1 in December 2024 after South Africa’s ODI series against England, ending Sciver-Brunt’s six-month spell at the summit. Mandhana returned to No. 1 in June 2025, her first time at the top since November 2019, and has continued to be one of the defining ODI batters of this era.
Across the same period, the style of ODI batting has also changed. Teams now expect top-order players to score faster without losing control, while No. 4 and No. 5 batters are asked to rebuild and finish in the same innings. That balance is why players such as Wolvaardt, Mandhana, Sciver-Brunt, Mooney and Litchfield feature so heavily in modern discussion.
Career runs give long-term context to the live women’s ODI batter ranking. This table is separate from the current ratings list; it shows the players who have made the biggest scoring impact across many seasons of 50-over cricket. Active or recently active names are marked with a plus because their totals can rise after every ODI appearance.
| # | Player | Team | Women’s ODI Runs |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mithali Raj | India | 7,805 |
| 2 | Charlotte Edwards | England | 5,992 |
| 3 | Suzie Bates | New Zealand | 5,982+ |
| 4 | Stafanie Taylor | West Indies | 5,873+ |
| 5 | Laura Wolvaardt | South Africa | 5,477+ |
| 6 | Smriti Mandhana | India | 5,322+ |
| 7 | Belinda Clark | Australia | 4,844 |
| 8 | Karen Rolton | Australia | 4,814 |
| 9 | Tammy Beaumont | England | 4,738+ |
| 10 | Amy Satterthwaite | New Zealand | 4,639 |
Mithali Raj remains the benchmark for ODI batting volume, while active names such as Mandhana, Wolvaardt, Beaumont and Taylor keep adding to the modern record race. Mandhana becoming the fastest and youngest player to 5,000 women’s ODI runs added another landmark to the current generation’s story.
Smriti Mandhana leads the women’s ODI batting rankings with a 790 rating, ahead of Laura Wolvaardt on 782.
Ratings are based on international ODI performances, with recent innings, match context and opposition quality all influencing a batter’s position.
Mithali Raj is the all-time leading women’s ODI run-scorer with 7,805 runs.
No. The ranking is a current ratings list, while the most-runs list is a career record. A current player can rank No. 1 even if another player has more lifetime runs.
Nat Sciver-Brunt, Laura Wolvaardt and Smriti Mandhana have all had major spells at or near No. 1 in the recent ODI batting cycle.
A two or three-match series can create meaningful movement because the system rewards fresh ODI performances and older innings gradually lose influence.
Strike rotation, powerplay control, spin play, running between the creases, late acceleration and the ability to score under chase pressure are all important in ODI batting.
Women ODI Team Rankings | Women ODI All-Rounder Rankings