The top 10 overseas stars in this season’s County Championship – who takes No 1 spot for 2026?

One of the unique things about the County Championship as a first-class competition is the number of players from abroad that want to participate in it.
Unlike the Sheffield Shield or the Ranji Trophy, England’s county system welcomes all and sundry from the four corners of the globe – at times to the chagrin of the Test captain, admittedly – and the length of the season combined with availability issues caused by overlaps with other competitions around the world or international call-ups mean that dozens can feature between April and September.
There are several factors that can make the overseas professional valuable – longevity, loyalty, robustness, skill, attitude, impact and potential among them. And with international stars limited to two per match, getting the right ones in can make the difference between glory and failure.
Here, we have considered all of the above to rank the top 10 imports of 2026:
10th: Nathan McSweeney (Northamptonshire, Australia)
More of an old school grinder of runs rather than a dasher, the man who has captained South Australia to back-to-back Sheffield Shield titles following a 29-year drought is primarily here for experience of conditions ahead of next year’s Ashes.
It’s a running theme this year, and Ben Stokes has already voiced his concerns over how many Aussies are warming up already for next summer when English players are not afforded the same courtesy by Shield sides.
But Northants will benefit from his desire to add to his three Test appearances, and his off-spin could be worth 20-plus wickets too.
Nathan McSweeney has captained South Australia to back-to-back Sheffield Shield titles and now brings his talents to the County Championship
9th: Caleb Jewell (Derbyshire, Australia)
It went under the radar, but the uncapped Australian left-hander was the most prolific scorer across the three county competitions in 2025, with a combined 1,802 runs.
And although he passed 50 just twice in 19 Sheffield Shield innings for Tasmania last winter, his reliability at the top of the order for the Midlands club gets him onto this list.
8th: Rahul Chahar (Surrey, India)
Capped seven times in white-ball cricket by India, the leg-spinner will add match-winning potential for a team desperate to win a fourth Division One title in five years once his Indian Premier League spell with Chennai Super Kings is over.
He showed how influential he can be in late-season conditions here with career-best figures of eight for 51 on his Surrey debut last September.
7th: Beau Webster (Warwickshire, Australia)
The giant Aussie all-rounder returns to Edgbaston for the first four months of the season after international calls disrupted a maiden campaign with the Bears last year that still included match-turning innings against Yorkshire and Worcestershire.
His adaptability with the bat across situations and formats is mirrored with the ball, as a bowler who can bowl seam or spin to order.
His lone innings in last winter’s Ashes brought him 71 not out at the SCG to help seal a thumping 4-1 series win for Australia, before he took the crucial wickets of Harry Brook, Will Jacks and Stokes in England’s second innings.
Beau Webster has eight Test caps under his belt, averaging 41.09 with five half-centuries
6th: Kyle Abbott (Hampshire, South Africa)
Since 2014 the veteran paceman has been a model of consistency, snaring 478 wickets in 116 first-class appearances for the club at a miserly rate of exactly 20 runs each – a tally that includes 32 five-wicket hauls.
He also briefly appeared for Worcestershire and Middlesex and his commitment to county cricket arguably restricted his number of international caps to just 60 across all formats.
5th: Fergus O’Neill (Nottinghamshire, Australia)
The 25-year-old Credited by captain Haseeb Hameed for providing the impetus in the club’s Championship-winning season 12 months ago, bagging 21 wickets during a four-week period and impressing within the Trent Bridge dressing room for his unwavering team ethic.
A bowler who – unusually for an Australian – relies on nagging accuracy and skilful seam manipulation over pace has returned for the first of two three-month stints in 2026 and 2027.
He averages under 20 with the ball in his first-class career and was Victoria’s leading wicket-taker with 35 as they reached the Sheffield Shield final last month.
Fergus O’Neill starred in a brief stint with Nottinghamshire last season and is back to help their title defence in 2026
4th: Sean Abbott (Surrey, Australia)
This is the fourth stint at The Oval for a player who says he feels more like a local than an import.
Arguably the best bowling all-rounder in world cricket, Abbott takes his Championship wickets at less than 26 runs each and averages 38 with the bat.
He is also a fine Twenty20 death bowler and a big hitter who struck the joint-fastest T20 Blast hundred – a 34-ball effort against Kent – in 2023. It has earned him 58 white-ball caps for Australia, taking 69 wickets.
3rd: Mohammad Abbas (Derbyshire, Pakistan)
His strong relationship with former Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur was integral to the highly skilled seamer moving across the East Midlands and swapping a Division One title defence for a promotion bid.
A County Championship career bowling average of 19.89 with Leicestershire, Hampshire and Nottinghamshire highlights the quality that Derbyshire will be injecting into their attack with the addition of Abbas on a two-year deal.
A County Championship career bowling average of 19.89 with Leicestershire, Hampshire and Nottinghamshire highlights the quality that Mohammad Abbas will bring to Derbyshire
2nd: David Bedingham (Durham, South Africa)
Owes his international career to his prolific six seasons to date in the North East, featuring 16 hundreds and 14 half-centuries in Championship action.
Other counties circled when he was out of contract last year, but having committed to playing all formats in 2026, he has the chance to rediscover the batting rhythm disrupted by South Africa call-ups over the past 12 months.
1st: Simon Harmer (Essex, South Africa)
The ultimate import: loyal, durable and successful.
Simon Harmer has been the ultimate import for Essex: loyal, durable and successful
He might be 37 now, but the off-spinner remains mightily effective when the ball turns, as 30 Test wickets in four Tests for South Africa against India and Pakistan last winter testify.
His Chelmsford CV includes two Championship winner’s medals and a Bob Willis Trophy win, while he also captained the club to T20 glory in 2019 when he was named man of the match in the final for three wickets with the ball and 18 unbeaten runs off seven deliveries with the bat.
Also a brilliant slip fielder, which always comes in particularly handy in England.

