Women's cricket has grown from a niche to a mainstream prediction market category faster than almost any other sport. The T20 World Cup cycle, expanding bilateral series, and the emergence of domestic franchise competitions have created a year-round calendar of tradeable events.
The T20 World Cup Market
The Women's T20 World Cup is the flagship event for women's cricket prediction markets. Australia, England, India, and South Africa are typically among the top four priced contenders. Australia's sustained dominance makes them almost always the market favourite — but ante-post markets frequently overprice them relative to true probability.
Bilateral Series Markets
- →Series winner markets across all three formats (T20, ODI, Test)
- →Match result markets with first innings and innings lead sub-markets
- →Top run scorer and top wicket-taker for the series
- →Individual player performance markets (centuries, five-wicket hauls)
- →Win margin markets for dominant teams in favourable conditions
Domestic T20 Franchise Markets
The Hundred, SA20 Women's, WBBL, and the Women's IPL (WPL) all generate prediction market volume. The WPL in particular attracted significant new liquidity in 2025 — India's domestic women's cricket market is expanding rapidly.
Women's cricket markets are newer and therefore thinner than men's equivalent markets. Thinner markets mean more opportunity for researchers who track form, conditions, and squad news closely.
Edges in Women's Cricket Markets
Pitch and conditions research is underweighted in women's cricket markets. The relationship between pitch type and match outcome is just as predictive as in men's cricket — but far fewer prediction market participants have done the analysis. This is a repeatable edge.
"Women's cricket prediction markets reward the same rigour as men's — but with far less competition from informed traders. That's the opportunity in plain sight."
— Boromarket