
It can be described as primal. The sound of the bat sounds like it is slicing through the air, the leather making contact at the sweet spot, and then there is silence for half a second, and then the ball vanishes into the crowd. Six. In no form of cricket is a run scored that brings the crowd to their feet as quickly as this. In T20Is, that moment is the highlight of the match.
So when it comes to discussing who has the record for most sixes within a T20 international match, we aren’t simply counting the figures. We mean the players capable of shaking the very foundation of the stadium. The players who are dreaded by bowlers during the death overs. The players who have revolutionized the way we consume the sport.
This category was once solely owned by Chris Gayle. For a long time, he could ensure that any six hit anywhere in the globe was likely to be his. However, with time, things change, and now we shift focus to a new generation spearheaded by, perhaps, one of the game’s cleanest strikers ever, Rohit Sharma.
The Hitman Rises
Rohit doesn’t just hit sixes. He caresses them. He stands still, watches the ball, and sends it on an arc that feels almost too smooth to be real. And yet, as of 2025, he’s the man with the most sixes in T20 international cricket. Not just for India — for the world. And here’s the kicker: he didn’t get there by slogging. He got there with timing.
Player | Matches | Sixes | Strike Rate | Career Span |
Rohit Sharma | 151 | 190+ | 139.97 | 2007–2025 |
Martin Guptill | 122 | 173 | 135.72 | 2009–2023 |
Chris Gayle | 79 | 124 | 142.75 | 2006–2021 |
Jos Buttler | 120+ | 125+ | 143+ | 2011–ongoing |
But it’s not just about Rohit. Look at Guptill, who punched way above his weight class for years in a New Zealand side that never had the depth of India or England. Or Jos Buttler, who’s still very much active and could still climb. Each of these names tells a story of a format that rewards risk and fearlessness.
The Psychology of a Six-Hitter
Not every batter can clear the rope consistently. It’s not just strength — though that helps. It’s judgment. Reading length early. Anticipating field placement. And in some cases, it’s just attitude. You watch someone like Glenn Maxwell or Suryakumar Yadav and you realize: they’re not aiming for boundaries. They’re built to break geometry.
Rohit isn’t flashy in that way. He doesn’t scoop or reverse sweep unless he has to. But when it’s in his arc? He doesn’t miss. And that consistency — that ability to pick moments and deliver maximum damage — is what got him to the top of the most sixes in T20 international cricket leaderboard.
Changing the Blueprint
Rewind a decade and most teams still tried to play T20s like extended ODIs. Get to 50 in the powerplay, consolidate, launch at the end. But players like Gayle, de Villiers, and later Rohit and Buttler, broke that model. Now, teams are aiming for 200+ totals regularly. And you can’t get there with twos and threes.
Look at the 2024 T20 World Cup. The average first-innings winning score was 192. In 2007? It was around 150. That jump is directly tied to boundary-hitters, especially six-hitters, getting more license, more training, and more data. Hitting sixes isn’t just a thrill anymore. It’s a strategy.
Year | Avg. Winning 1st Innings Score | Avg. Sixes Per Innings |
2007 | 152 | 5.4 |
2016 | 176 | 8.2 |
2024 | 192 | 10.6 |
Beyond The Numbers

Records are There To Be Broken. Buttler Might Overtake Rohit, And Finn Allen Or Harry Brook Could Dramatically Change The Game. Six-hitting, however, remains a traditional art form. This era is marked by a blend of wit and old-school charm alongside meticulous matchup analytics, providing us with some amazing thrill-seekers.
It’s This Blend That Allows Different Masterpieces To Create Their Own History, Quite Literally In The Case Of Those Holding The Record For Most Sixes Hit In An International T20 Game. Each Name Listed Is Part Of A Curated Playlist That Marks History; A Reminder And Tribute To Their Incredible Efforts And The Tapestry Of Moments Created That Transcend Beyond Time. The Attempted Euphoria, Stillness From Batters, Unexplainable Anger – Each Ball Player And Spectator Knew The Anger And Battling Tension That Would Follow The Contact.
Such Is The Beauty Of The Sport.

Meet Arjun Kushaan, a passionate cricket analyst at The Cricket24x7. From street matches in his childhood to competitive college tournaments, cricket has always been a central part of Arjun’s life. With a strong background in data analysis and a natural affinity for numbers, he brings a fresh, analytical lens to the game. At The Cricket24x7, Arjun blends his deep love for cricket with his data-driven approach to deliver detailed insights and well-rounded coverage for fans of the sport.