Indian Women's Cricket Participation Doubles Since 2020, BBC Study Reveals

A major BBC-commissioned study reveals that women's participation in cricket has doubled across 14 Indian states since 2020, now reaching 10% of women surveyed. The growth is even more pronounced among young women aged 15-24, with 16% now playing cricket. Viewership of women's cricket, particularly the Women's Premier League, has surged, and more young women are considering sports careers. However, the study also highlights persistent challenges, including safety concerns and entrenched stereotypes about women in sports.

Key Points: Women's Cricket Participation Doubles in India: BBC Study

  • Women's cricket participation doubled to 10%
  • 1 in 4 young women consider sports career
  • Gender participation gap narrows from 1:5 to 1:3
  • WPL viewership nearly doubled since 2020
  • Safety and stereotypes remain key barriers
3 min read

Sharp increase in Indian women's participation in cricket: BBC study

A new BBC study shows women's cricket participation in India has doubled since 2020, with viewership and career interest rising sharply.

"The findings show both progress and continuing barriers. - Rupa Jha"

New Delhi, March 13

A new large-scale study commissioned by the BBC and Collective Newsroom suggests that women's participation in cricket has doubled across the 14 Indian states surveyed since 2020, according to a press release.

The research also finds that one in four young women aged 15 to 24 has considered sport as a career option.

Across the states included in the study, the proportion of women who say they play cricket has risen from 5 per cent in 2020 to 10 per cent. Participation among young women has grown even more sharply. Sixteen per cent of women aged 15 to 24 now say they play cricket, compared with six per cent in 2020.

Cricket has also strengthened its position as the most played sport among women in the states surveyed. In 2020, it only narrowly edged past kabaddi, but the new figures suggest it is now firmly ahead.

Participation has increased across most regions. All but two of the states surveyed report a rise in the number of women playing cricket. In Uttar Pradesh, levels of participation have increased tenfold, from one per cent to ten per cent.

The gender gap in cricket participation across the states covered has also narrowed. The study indicates that for every woman who plays cricket, three men play the sport. In 2020, the ratio was one to five.

The study suggests wider changes too:

Twenty-six per cent of the young women surveyed, aged 15 to 24, say they have considered a career in sport, up from 16 per cent in 2020. The highest levels are in Tamil Nadu (27 per cent), Madhya Pradesh (19 per cent) and Meghalaya (19 per cent).

Fifty-one per cent of respondents report following coverage of women's sports in the past six months. This is now within 10 percentage points of men's sports coverage.

Viewership levels for the precursor to the Women's Premier League, the T20 Challenge, rose from 15 per cent in 2020 to 28 per cent watching the WPL now, across the states surveyed.

These levels are approaching those for the men's league. The research suggests recent successes by Indian sportswomen may have contributed to this growth.

Support for the national team is now the main reason people say they follow or attend women's sport, followed by support for individual sportswomen. In 2020, audiences were primarily motivated by a general interest in sport.

Participation in badminton has also risen among women surveyed, particularly in Punjab, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.

The study identifies continuing challenges, too:

13 per cent of women who do not play any sport cite safety concerns as a barrier.

43 per cent of respondents say women's sport is less entertaining than men's. Nearly half (46 per cent) believe sportswomen should be attractive, up from 37 per cent in 2020. Women are more likely than men to hold this view, the study suggests.

65 per cent of respondents who do not play sport cite lack of time as the main reason.

Rupa Jha, Editor-in-Chief and Co-founder of Collective Newsroom, said, "The findings show both progress and continuing barriers. While participation and viewership are rising fast, stereotypes and practical challenges remain. We hope this data will prompt further discussion and action to support women athletes."

The study builds upon the findings of a survey administered by global research and insights company Kantar between December 2025 and January 2026. Researchers interviewed more than 10,000 people, aged 15 and over, face-to-face (CAPI) across 14 Indian states.

Results were compared with a similar survey conducted in 2020 as part of the BBC's Indian Sportswoman of the Year (ISWOTY) initiative, which honours and celebrates Indian sportswomen's achievements.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
UP showing a tenfold increase is incredible! Goes to show what visibility and local tournaments can do. But the stat about 43% finding women's sport less entertaining is disappointing. Have they watched Smriti Mandhana bat or Deepti Sharma bowl? Pure class.
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Sarah B
Interesting study. The narrowing gender gap from 1:5 to 1:3 in just a few years is promising. However, the increase in people believing sportswomen "should be attractive" is a worrying trend. Talent and skill should be the only criteria, not appearance.
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Aman W
The progress is real on the ground. In my society in Noida, we now have a girls' cricket coaching camp every evening. Five years ago, it was unthinkable. The 13% safety concern is valid though - better street lighting and dedicated timings at public parks are needed.
K
Karthik V
Great to see Tamil Nadu leading in young women considering sports careers! The legacy of Mithali Raj and the current stars is inspiring a generation. But the "lack of time" barrier (65%) is the real issue. Schools and colleges must integrate sports more seriously, not just as a period to skip.
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Nisha Z
As a former kabaddi player, I'm a bit sad to see cricket pulling so far ahead, but it's the reality. The media coverage and money in cricket (WPL) are huge factors. Hope other sports get similar leagues and attention soon. The overall rise in women's sports viewership is the real win here.

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