Since 2013, the series has consisted of a multi-format series with points awarded for each of the matches. Two points was awarded for each WODI or WT20I win, four points to the Test winner, or two points to each team in the event of the Test being a draw.[2]
In August 2017, Australia's captain Meg Lanning announced that she would miss the series, after undergoing surgery on her shoulder.[3][4] The following month, Rachael Haynes was named as her replacement.[5] In September 2017, Cricket Australia confirmed that the first match, the WODI at Allan Border Field, Brisbane, had sold out, the first time a Women's Ashes fixture had done so.[6][7]
The Test match was played as a day/night fixture, the first time a Women's Test has been played as such.[8] The WODIs were part of the 2017–2020 ICC Women's Championship,[9] with Australia winning the WODI series 2–1.[10] The Test match ended as a draw, with Ellyse Perry of Australia scoring the first double century in a Women's Ashes Test.[11] Australia Women retained the Ashes, after they won the first of the WT20I fixtures, leaving them with an unassailable lead.[12] England Women went on to win the WT20I series 2–1, with the series tied 8–8 across all formats.[13]