ARTICLE AD BOX
England will face Sri Lanka at Edgbaston in the opening match of the Women's T20 World Cup on 12 June 2026.
Last month it was confirmed that Lord's would host the final of the 12-team tournament, with Headingley, Old Trafford, Edgbaston, The Oval, the Hampshire Bowl and Bristol's County Ground as the other group-stage venues.
England, Sri Lanka, Australia, South Africa, India, West Indies, Pakistan and defending champions New Zealand have already qualified, and the four remaining places will be decided at a qualifying tournament later this year.
The format consists of two groups of six teams and the top two from each will progress to the semi-finals.
England's group includes West Indies, New Zealand, Sri Lanka and two qualifiers, with Australia, India, South Africa and Pakistan in the other.
Both semi-finals will be held at The Oval on 30 June and 2 July respectively, and the final will be on Sunday, 5 July.
The past six editions of the tournament have consisted of 10 teams.
England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt, said: "World Cups are always special, but this one already feels different - it has the potential to be truly game-changing.
"It's going to be a huge moment for our sport and a brilliant opportunity to inspire young people and captivate fans across the country."
Other notable fixtures include India v Pakistan at Edgbaston on 14 June, while England face champions New Zealand at The Oval on Saturday 27 June and Australia take on India the following day.
England have not won the tournament since its first edition in 2009, when they beat New Zealand under the captaincy of current coach Charlotte Edwards.
They were runners-up to Australia in 2012, 2014 and 2018, were knocked out in the semis in 2020 and 2023 and did not make it out of the group stage last year.
Australia have won the trophy a record six times, their most recent title coming in South Africa in 2023 - before New Zealand's surprise win last autumn.
However under Edwards and new captain Sciver-Brunt, England's first major assignment comes at the end of September with the 50-over World Cup taking place in India.
Group 1: Australia, South Africa, India, Pakistan, Qualifier, Qualifier
Group 2: West Indies, England, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, Qualifier, Qualifier
All start times BST
12 June: England v Sri Lanka, Edgbaston (18:30)
13 June: Q2 v Q3 (10.30) and Australia v South Africa (14:30) - Old Trafford
West Indies v New Zealand (18:30) - Hampshire Bowl
14 June: Q1 v Q4 (10:30) and India v Pakistan (14:30) - Edgbaston
16 June: New Zealand v Sri Lanka (14:30) and England v Q3 (18:30) - Hampshire
17 June: Australia v Q1 (10:30) and India v Q4 (14:30) - Headingley
South Africa v Pakistan (18:30) - Edgbaston
18 June: West Indies v Q2 (18:30) - Headingley
19 June: New Zealand v Q3 (18:30) - Hampshire
20 June: Australia v Q4 (10:30) and Pakistan v Q1 (14:30) - Hampshire
England v Q2 (18:30) - Headingley
21 June: West Indies v Sri Lanka (10:30) - Bristol
South Africa v India (14:30) - Old Trafford
23 June: New Zealand v Q3 (10:30) and Sri Lanka v Q3 (14:30) - Bristol
Australia v Pakistan (18:30) - Headingley
24 June: England v West Indies (18:30) - Lord's
25 June: India v Q1 (14:30) - Old Trafford
South Africa v Q4 (18:30) - Bristol
26 June: Sri Lanka v Q2 (18:30) - Old Trafford
27 June: Pakistan v Q4 (10:30) and West Indies v Q3 (14:30) - Bristol
England v New Zealand (18:30) - The Oval
28 June: South Africa v Q1 (10:30) and Australia v India (14:30) - Lord's
30 June: First semi-final (14:30) - The Oval
2 July: Second semi-final (18:30) - The Oval
5 July: Final (14:30) - Lord's
There are reserve days scheduled for all three knockout fixtures.