Cricket’s return to the Olympic Games is edging ever closer, and the British team will be part of it. Thanks to England’s performances at the 2026 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup, the United Kingdom has officially secured its place at the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games. The qualification rewards England’s campaign at the ongoing World Cup, where they will face South Africa in the semi-finals on 2 July, while also marking another significant milestone in the return of a sport that has been absent from the Olympic programme since 1900.

Qualification secured through the Women’s T20 World Cup
Only six nations will compete in the women’s tournament at Los Angeles 2028. The United States has a guaranteed place as the host nation, while the remaining five qualification spots are allocated through different criteria.
Four of those places have been awarded to the highest-ranked teams from four different continents – Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania – based on their performances at the ongoing 2026 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup. The system intentionally limits each continent to one direct qualification place in order to ensure geographical diversity at the Olympic tournament.
It is through this pathway that the British team officially secured qualification thanks to England’s results, as England is the only British nation competing as a Full Member of the ICC. At the Olympic Games, where the British nations rightfully compete together, it is England’s performances that count towards Olympic qualification. By finishing as the highest-ranked European side in the tournament, England has therefore earned the British delegation a place among the six teams that will contest the first Olympic women’s cricket title since the sport’s return.
Australia, India and South Africa have also secured qualification as the other continental representatives. The sixth and final place will be decided in 2027 through a new ICC Olympic Qualifier, bringing together the highest-ranked nations that have not yet qualified.
Cricket’s historic return to the Olympic stage
This qualification carries added significance as cricket will return to the Olympic Games after an absence of 128 years. The sport’s only previous appearance came at the Paris 1900 Olympic Games, where the United Kingdom claimed the only Olympic gold medal in its cricket history.
The format selected for Los Angeles will be T20, the shortest and most explosive format of modern international cricket. Each match consists of two teams batting for 20 overs each, making games significantly shorter than traditional cricket and far more accessible to a wider audience.
The women’s competition will feature six teams, each made up of a 15-player squad. They will be split into two groups of three before progressing to a second phase, where each side will face two teams from the opposite group. An overall standings table will then determine the medal matches, with the top two teams contesting the gold medal and the third and fourth-placed teams meeting for bronze.
For the United Kingdom, qualification already allows preparations for the Olympic Games to begin with confidence. The women’s cricket tournament at Los Angeles 2028 will take place from 12 to 20 July 2028, while the men’s competition will be held from 22 to 29 July. The British men’s team, meanwhile, must still earn qualification. Four places will be allocated according to the ICC Men’s T20 rankings on 31 December 2026, before the final berth is decided at the ICC Olympic Qualifier in 2027. England currently sits second in the world rankings behind India.
Qualification also offers the United Kingdom the opportunity to reconnect with a little-known chapter of its sporting history. At cricket’s only previous Olympic appearance, at Paris 1900, the British men’s team defeated a french team full of british men to win the sport’s only Olympic gold medal, securing its place in Olympic history. One hundred and twenty-eight years later, cricket finally returns to the Games, and the British team will have the opportunity to uphold that historic legacy, this time with a women’s team already guaranteed its place in Los Angeles.