Check the latest ICC Men’s ODI Ranking 2026 with live ODI team ratings, ranking table, points guide, top 20 standings and format-wise filters for every major ICC ranking list.
This live table is the centre of the page. Use it to check the current ODI team order, rating column, ranking movement and the full top 20 list. The same filter panel also lets visitors switch to men’s or women’s Test, ODI and T20I rankings for teams, batters, bowlers and all-rounders without leaving the rankings experience.
| # | 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.
The ICC Men’s ODI Team Ranking is designed to compare national teams by performance over a rolling results period, not by reputation or tournament history alone. A team rises when it wins matches that carry ranking value and falls when recent results no longer support its rating. The ranking is especially useful because it puts bilateral series, tournament matches and form across different conditions into one table.
According to the ICC annual update published on 11 May 2026, India retained the No. 1 position in the men’s ODI team rankings, while New Zealand reduced the gap to five rating points. Australia stayed third, South Africa moved above Pakistan into fourth, and Pakistan slipped to fifth. That kind of movement shows why the table needs to be checked regularly: a team can keep the same position, gain rating, lose rating or be overtaken even when only a small margin separates the top sides.
The three columns readers should understand first are matches, points and rating. Matches show the number of ODIs counted in the current ranking cycle. Points are the ranking points accumulated from those matches. Rating is the key number used to sort teams; it is broadly the team’s ranking points divided by matches, with ICC weighting rules applied across the rolling period.
This is why a team with more raw points is not automatically ranked above another side. Rating reflects average strength across the counted matches, so quality of results matters more than simply playing more cricket. Recent results also matter more than older results, and results against strong opponents can carry more ranking influence than wins against lower-rated teams. For readers, the simplest rule is this: the rating column is the ranking score, while points and matches explain how that score was built.
The latest official ICC update confirmed India on top, New Zealand second and Australia third in the men’s ODI table. South Africa gained enough rating strength to move ahead of Pakistan, while Ireland moved above Zimbabwe outside the top 10. The USA also climbed above Scotland, and the UAE moved ahead of Canada in the lower part of the top 20. These movements are worth covering because they answer a high-intent search question: not only who is No. 1, but which teams are gaining or losing ground.
For a rankings page to stay useful, the live table should provide the exact current order while the article explains the meaning behind the table. If India remain No. 1, the editorial section can mention the size of the lead. If New Zealand, Australia, South Africa or Pakistan move, update only the current-form paragraph and the FAQ answer about the top five. The calculation, points-versus-rating explanation and internal navigation can stay evergreen.
ODI cricket started long before the modern public ICC ranking archive. The Cricket World Cup began in 1975, with West Indies winning the first two editions in 1975 and 1979, India winning in 1983, Australia in 1987, Pakistan in 1992 and Sri Lanka in 1996. Those winners should not be presented as official ICC No. 1 ranking holders for those exact years unless a verified historical ranking table is being used. They are better used as context for ODI eras.
The modern ICC ODI ranking system is usually discussed from the early 2000s onward, when the ICC ODI Championship and team-ranking tables became a regular public reference. Australia dominated much of the early ranking era, India have had multiple spells near or at the top, and England’s white-ball rise after 2015 changed the competitive balance before their 2019 World Cup win. This brief history helps readers understand that the current ICC Men’s ODI Ranking is a living table, not a permanent judgement on all-time ODI greatness.
India retained the No. 1 position in the official ICC Men’s ODI Team Rankings after the 2026 annual update. Use the live table above for the latest rating and rank order after each new update.
Both terms usually refer to the same team table. Searchers often type ICC Men’s ODI Ranking in singular form, while the official page is commonly described as the ICC Men’s ODI Team Rankings.
ICC team ratings are based on ranking points earned from ODI results over a rolling period. The rating column is the key ranking score and is broadly points divided by matches, with ICC weighting rules applied.
Points are the accumulated ranking points from counted matches. Rating is the average ranking score used to order teams, so a team with fewer matches can still rank higher if its rating is stronger.
The rankings can change after ODI series, tournaments and ICC ranking updates. Check the Last Updated date and the live table above for the latest available order.
Yes. Use the filters on this CricPage rankings table to switch between teams, batters, bowlers and all-rounders across men’s and women’s Test, ODI and T20I rankings.
Because rankings use a rolling period and relative results. When older matches lose weight or other teams gain or lose rating points, the gaps around a team can change.
ICC events use their own qualification rules. ODI rankings can influence context, seeding or qualification pathways in some cycles, but always check the official tournament qualification rules for a specific World Cup.
Use the filters above to switch between men’s and women’s team, batting, bowling and all-rounder rankings across Test, ODI and T20I cricket.
Men Test Batters | Men Test Bowlers | Men Test All-Rounders
Men ODI Batters | Men ODI Bowlers | Men ODI All-Rounders
Men T20I Batters | Men T20I Bowlers | Men T20I All-Rounders
Women Test Batters | Women Test Bowlers | Women Test All-Rounders
Women ODI Batters | Women ODI Bowlers | Women ODI All-Rounders
Women T20I Batters | Women T20I Bowlers | Women T20I All-Rounders
Quick access to the 18 player ranking combinations across men’s and women’s Test, ODI and T20I cricket.
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