Come here to find all the information you need to help you plan your visit to the Home of Cricket, the latest news from the Ground and to book your event.
We’ve got a wide variety of formats covered with an exciting line up of matches to get your cricket fix.
Whether you like red or white ball, domestic or international, or men’s or women’s cricket, Lord’s will have the perfect cricket experience for you, your family and friends.
Marylebone Cricket Club is the world’s most active cricket club, the owner of Lord’s Ground and the guardian of the Laws of the game. Find out more about the history of MCC, our work in the Community and the famous Lord's Museum.
FIND OUT MORE
Step closer. Your new digital platform at the Home of Cricket.
Subscribe now for early access to selected international matches, exclusive content, coaching masterclasses and many more discounts and offers.
Your access to Lord's like never before.
Marylebone Cricket Club is one of the World's most active Cricket Clubs, the owner of Lord's Ground and the Guardian of the Laws and Spirit of the Game.
With around 200 full time staff members covering a wide range of sectors - from IT to Chefs to Pavilion Stewards - there is a role at the Home of Cricket for everyone.
Our Lord's Shops have a wide range of clothing, headwear and gifts and souvenirs available, so you can own your own piece of memorabilia from Home of Cricket.
Prior to that, rules were generally agreed by the participants in advance of a given match, such as those agreed by the Duke of Richmond and Mr Brodrick in 1727. Neither these, nor the later Laws, offered any guidance on how to play the game – this was considered to be generally understood – instead they provided agreement on likely areas of dispute, an important consideration when significant sums of money were often at stake.
Gambling was rife amongst the English aristocracy in the 18th century and they found in cricket an excellent outlet for their passion. Many nobles assembled their own teams and challenged their contemporaries to matches; a ‘purse’ of a thousand guineas was not unusual. As the game grew in prominence and popularity, the need for a consistent framework of rules for the game became apparent. Cricket’s wealthy patrons began to meet frequently to revise the game’s Laws, at places like the Star and Garter in Pall Mall. When the new Marylebone Club began to attract these same patrons, it was natural for MCC to issue a new code of Laws. Lord’s would be the legislative and administrative centre of cricket for the next two centuries. MCC remains custodian of the Laws of Cricket to this day.