| Nickname | Brown Caps | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| One Day name | Surrey | |||
| Personnel | ||||
| Captain | Rory Burns | |||
| One Day captain | Rory Burns (LA) Sam Curran (T20) | |||
| Coach | Gareth Batty | |||
| Chief executive | Steve Elworthy | |||
| Team information | ||||
| Colours | First-class: List A and T20: | |||
| Founded | 1845; 180 years ago (1845) | |||
| Home ground | The Oval,Kennington, London | |||
| Capacity | 25,500 | |||
| History | ||||
| First-class debut | MCC in 1846 at The Oval | |||
| Championship wins | 22 outright and 1 shared | |||
| Second Division Championship wins | 2 | |||
| CB40/Pro40/Sunday League wins | 3 | |||
| FP Trophy/NatWest Trophy wins | 1 | |||
| Twenty20 Cup wins | 1 | |||
| Benson & Hedges Cup wins | 3 | |||
| Official website | www | |||
| ||||

Surrey County Cricket Club (Surrey CCC) is afirst-class club incounty cricket, one of eighteen in the domesticcricket structure ofEngland and Wales. It represents thehistoric county ofSurrey, including areas that now formSouth London. Teams representing the county are recorded from 1709 onwards; the current club was founded in 1845 and has held first-class status continuously since then. Surrey have played in every top-level domestic cricket competition in England, including every edition of theCounty Championship (which began in 1890).[1]
The club's home ground isThe Oval, in theKennington area ofLambeth in South London. They have been based there continuously since 1845. The club also has an 'out ground' atWoodbridge Road,Guildford, where some home games are played each season.
Surrey's long history includes three major periods of great success. The club was unofficially proclaimed as "Champion County" seven times during the 1850s; it won the title eight times in nine years from 1887 to 1895 (including the first official County Championship in 1890); and won seven consecutive titles from 1952 to 1958. Surrey won 23 of its 28 county matches in 1955, the most wins by any team in the County Championship and a record which can no longer be beaten (as fewer than 23 matches have been played each season since 1993).[2] Surrey have won the County Championship 22 times outright (and shared once), a number exceeded only byYorkshire; their most recent championship win was in2024.[3]
The club's badge is thePrince of Wales's feathers, used since 1915, as thePrince of Wales owns the land on which The Oval stands.[4] The club's traditional colour is chocolate brown, with players wearing brown caps and helmets, and the club is sometimes known by the nickname 'Brown Caps'.[5][6]
Cricket is thought to have evolved from bat and ball games, played by children in southeast England during the Middle Ages. The first written record of the sport is from a witness statement by theGuildford resident and formerRoyal Grammar School pupil,John Derrick. In 1597 (old style, 1598 modern style), Derrick testified in a court case over the disputed enclosure of wasteland in the town that, as a child, "hee and his fellowes did runne and play there at Creckett and other plaies".[7][8] In 1611, KingJames I gave to his eldest son, Henry,Prince of Wales, themanors ofKennington andVauxhall, where the home ground of Surrey – The Oval – is today. To this day, thePrince of Wales's feathers feature on the club's badge.[9]
Cricket became well established in Surrey during the 17th century and the earliest village matches took place before theEnglish Civil War. It is believed that the earliest county teams were formed in the aftermath of theRestoration in 1660. The earliest knownfirst-class match in Surrey wasCroydon vLondon at Croydon on 1 July 1707. In 1709, the earliest known inter-county match took place betweenKent and Surrey atDartford Brent with £50 at stake.[10] Surrey would continue to play cricket against other representative teams from that time onwards. Probably its greatest players during theunderarm era were the famous bowlerLumpy Stevens and the wicket-keeper/batsmanWilliam Yalden, who both belonged to theChertsey club.
Surrey CCC was founded on the evening of 18 August 1845 at the Horns Tavern inKennington, South London, where around 100 representatives of variouscricket clubs in Surrey agreed a motion put byWilliam Denison (the club's first secretary) "that a Surrey club be now formed". A further meeting at the Tavern on 22 October 1845 formally constituted the club, appointed its officers and began enrolling members. A lease on Kennington Oval, a formermarket garden, had been obtained from theDuchy of Cornwall – which owned the land – by a Mr Houghton, and the ground's first game had been during the 1845 season.[11] Mr Houghton was of the oldMontpelier Cricket Club, 70 members of which formed the nucleus of the new Surrey County club. TheHonourable Fred Ponsonby, later theEarl of Bessborough was appointed as the first vice-president.
Surrey's inaugural first-class match was against theMCC at The Oval at the end of May, 1846.[12] The club's first inter-county match, againstKent, was held at The Oval the following month and Surrey emerged victorious by ten wickets.[13] However, the club did not do well that year, despite the extra public attractions at The Oval of a Walking Match and a Poultry Show. By the start of the 1847 season the club was £70 in debt and there was a motion to close. Ponsonby proposed that 6 life members be created for a fee of £12 each. His motion was duly passed, and the club survived.[11] The threat of construction on The Oval was also successfully dispelled in 1848 thanks to the intervention ofPrince Albert.[11]
In 1855, Surrey secured a new 21-year lease on their home ground and the club went on to enjoy an exceptionally successful decade,[11] being "Champion County" seven times from 1850 to 1859 and again in 1864. In 1857, all nine matches played by the county resulted in victory. This was the time of great players likeWilliam Caffyn,Julius Caesar,HH Stephenson andTom Lockyer, and a fine captain inFrederick Miller. An incident in 1862, at the instigation ofEdgar Willsher in a match between Surrey andEngland, led to the introduction ofoverarm bowling into cricket.
Following a brilliant season in 1864 when the team won eight and drew three of its eleven first-class matches, Surrey went into free-fall in the latter half of the 1860s, owing to the decline of key players Caesar, Stephenson and Mortlock and a puzzling inability to find quality bowlers to support the incomparableJames Southerton,[14] whose combination with wicket-keeperTed Pooley virtually carried the team.[15] Although Southerton broke many bowling records andHarry Jupp developed into the most prolific scorer among professional batsmen, Surrey's record in purely county matches during the seventeen seasons from1866 to1882 was 59 victories, 107 losses, two ties and 37 drawn games.[16] The team bottomed out in1871 when they did not win a single county match for the only time until 2008. Southerton, except in 1872 when fast bowlerJames Street helped him to win seven of twelve games, had no adequate support in bowling after underarm left-arm spinnerGeorge Griffith declined, and except when Richard Humphrey achieved prominence in 1872 the batting depended almost entirely on Jupp. The fielding was also generally below the standard expected of first-class cricket.[14]
The appointment of renowned sports administratorCharles Alcock as secretary of the club – a paid position for the first time[17] – in 1872 coincided with an improved performance; however, despite qualification rules being changed so that Southerton played every game for the county (up to 1872 he did not play wheneverSussex, the county of his birth, had a match on) Surrey performed poorly in the1873 season. As mainstays Jupp and Southerton declined from1875, matters were ameliorated by the discovery of class amateur batsmen inBunny Lucas,Walter Read andWilliam Game, but apart from1877 Surrey never won half as many games as they lost and the inadequacy of the bowling on flat Oval pitches was a severe handicap.
In 1880, although the county's record remained bad, Surrey began to make the steps that would return them to the top of the table with the appointment ofJohn Shuter as captain and of Walter Read – established as a[11]class batsman but previously available only in August – as assistant secretary. The death of Southerton and retirement of other veterans paved the way for new talent inMaurice Read,William Roller, left-arm spinnerEdward Barratt and pace bowlerCharles Horner to lay a foundation for long-term success in the middle 1880s. With the rapid rise ofGeorge Lohmann in1885, Surrey challenged for the unofficial title of Champion County for the first time in twenty years; then, by winning 32 of 42 matches in 1887, 1888 and 1889, Surrey were first or equal first in the final three years before official County Champions emerged.
Surrey then won official County Championship titles in 1890–1892 under John Shuter. After a disappointing season in 1893 when their batting failed on Oval pitches rendered fiery by several dry winters and springs,Kingsmill Key took over and led Surrey to further titles in 1894, 1895 and 1899. Leading players in these years were batsmanBobby Abel and a trio of top bowlers: George Lohmann,Bill Lockwood andTom Richardson. In 1899, Abel's unbeaten 357 helped Surrey to a mammoth total of 811 againstSomerset; only beaten in 2025 by 820 against Durham .[18][19]

The start of the 20th century brought a decline in Surrey's fortunes, and they won the title only once during the next fifty years, in 1914. At the request of Surrey's captainLord Dalmeny, thePrince of Wales (laterEdward VIII) allowed the use of hisfeathers on the club badge. The club's most famous player wasJack Hobbs, who began playing for the county in 1905, and he had a notable opening partner till 1914 inTom Hayward, who scored 3,518 runs in all first-class cricket in 1906, equalledC.B. Fry's record of 13 centuries in a season and, in one six-day period, scored two centuries atTrent Bridge and two more at Leicester. He scored his hundredth hundred at The Oval in 1913. Between the two World Wars, Surrey often had a good side, but it tended to be stronger in batting than in bowling; Hobbs played until 1934 with another good opening partner inAndrew Sandham. Hobbs scored more runs (61,760) and compiled more centuries (199) in first-class cricket than any other player in the history of the game.[20][21] In recognition of his contribution to the team, theeponymous Jack Hobbs Gates were inaugurated at The Oval.

The side was not completely bereft of quality in the bowling department, however:Alf Gover took 200 wickets in both 1936 and 1937, a fine achievement for a fast bowler on the flat Oval track. The Oval pitches of this period tended to be very good for batting, and many matches were drawn. The club captain for much of this period was the affable and bohemianPercy Fender, whose closest colleague was the England captain ofBodyline fame (or infamy),Douglas Jardine. In 1938, Surrey played a home match away from The Oval for the first time, atWoodbridge Road inGuildford.[22] After 1939, cricket took a break as theSecond World War occupied the nation and The Oval was seized forGovernment use.
From 1948 to 1959, Surrey were the pre-eminent English county team, finishing either first or second in the county championship in 10 seasons out of 12. They finished runners-up in 1948, shared the championship withLancashire in 1950, won seven consecutive outright titles from 1952 to 1958, and were runners-up again in 1959. Their margins of victory were usually large. For example,Yorkshire were runners-up in 1952 but finished 32 points behind.
Their great success was built on a remarkably strong bowling attack, withTest seamerAlec Bedser supported by the outstanding spin duo ofTony Lock andJim Laker, the latter widely regarded as one of the finest ever orthodox off-spinners. Lock and Laker made the most of Oval pitches, which were receptive to spin, but the club's success was also due to the positive and attacking captaincy ofStuart Surridge, who won the title in all five years of his leadership from 1952 to 1956. The team fielded extremely well and a feature was some brilliant close catching. The team had excellent batsmen, especially the elegantPeter May, and the determined and combativeKen Barrington.
A fallow period followed, and over the next forty years to 1998, Surrey won the County Championship only once, in 1971 during the career of England openerJohn Edrich and under the captaincy ofMicky Stewart, but greater success was achieved in the shorter form of the game. In 1969, Surrey employed their very first overseas player: the very popularPakistanileg break bowlerIntikhab Alam.[23][24] In addition to Intikhab, the Surrey attack in their Championship-winning side possessed four current or future England Test cricketers inGeoff Arnold,Robin Jackman,Bob Willis andPat Pocock. Edrich was subsequently appointed captain in 1973[25] and led Surrey to second position in the County Championship in his first year in charge and then secured Surrey their first limited overs silverware the following year with victory in theBenson and Hedges Cup. Edrich's replacement as captain,Roger Knight,[26] led Surrey toNatWest Trophy glory atLord's in 1982. Following Intikhab Alam, other overseas players to appear for the county included the talentedNew Zealand opening batsmanGeoff Howarth[27] and two extremely fearsome fast bowlers, theWest IndianSylvester Clarke[23][28] and the young PakistaniWaqar Younis.[24][29]
Following a relative drought of first-class success, and with growing concern over the club's internal structure, the club's members forced aSpecial General Meeting in 1995.[30] Following the resultant internal restructuring, a change of fortunes soon followed as new captainAlec Stewart – son of Micky – led the team to theSunday League title in 1996. This in turn proved to be the catalyst for further success under the captaincy ofAdam Hollioake and the influence ofKeith Medlycott, who was county coach from 1997 to 2003. County Championship triumphs in1999,2000 and2002 were complemented withBenson and Hedges Cup victories in1997 and2001, aNational League Division Two title in2000 and the inauguralTwenty20 Cup in 2003.[31] This was in spite of the death of the highly talented all-rounderBen Hollioake, Adam Hollioake's younger brother, who was involved in a fatal car accident in early 2002.[32] That same year,Ali Brown posted what remained until 2022 a world recordList A score of 268 againstGlamorgan at The Oval, beatingGraeme Pollock's former record score in the first of his two one-day double hundreds for Surrey. Adam Hollioake retired after the 2004 season.[33]

The run of success came to an end in 2005 when an ageing Surrey team was relegated to Division Two of the Championship, but an immediate recovery took place in 2006 as Surrey won promotion as champions of Division Two. This proved short-lived however, and they were once again relegated to Division Two in2008, failing to win a single game for the first time since 1871 and losing their last two games by an innings. Despite the end of a successful period, Surrey did post a List A world record score of 496–4 from 50 overs, the first of which was a maiden, againstGloucestershire at The Oval on 29 April 2007; Ali Brown top scored with 176 from just 97 deliveries.[34]
The 2000s saw the retirement of Alec Stewart,Mark Butcher,Graham Thorpe andMartin Bicknell, who all representedEngland, as well asSaqlain Mushtaq who played forPakistan. Another England player inMark Ramprakash had joined Surrey in 2001 and, despite the club's travails, became the nineteenth player to pass 15,000 first-class runs for the county, doing so at an average of over 70. Surrey did not threaten to achieve a return to Division One of the County Championship after their relegation, or to win either 40-over competition until 2011. However, the club did have more luck in the Twenty20 Cup following victory in2003, reaching finals day in2004,2005 and2006, but failing to win the competition. 2011 saw a revival in the team's fortunes. They achieved a return to Division One of the County Championship by the margin of a single point, as they won their final four games of the season.[35] They also won theCB40 competition.[36]
After narrowly avoiding relegation in 2012, a season greatly overshadowed by the sad death of talented young batsmanTom Maynard in June,[37] Surrey finished bottom of the Division One table the following year, and the Cricket Manager,Chris Adams, was sacked during the course of the season.[38]
Under the new management team of Alec Stewart, appointed director of cricket, andGraham Ford, recruited before the 2014 season to be head coach, they won the Division Two title in 2015 and were also beaten finalists in theRoyal London Cup.[39][40] In January 2016 it was announced that Ford had left to rejoin Sri Lanka as head coach.[41]Michael Di Venuto took over as head coach for the 2016 season[42] and after a poor start, with Surrey bottom of Division One after seven games, the team had a strong finish to the season, finishing in the middle of the Championship and again runners-up in the Royal London Cup.[43]
Gareth Batty stood down as captain at the end of 2017, and the 2018 season underRory Burns saw Surrey dominate the Championship, winning the title with two matches remaining.[44] Surrey won three consecutive County Championship titles in 2022,[3] 2023,[45] and 2024. This was the first time that a county had won three successive titles sinceYorkshire did so in the 1960s.[46] Rory Burns was captain and Alec Stewart was director of cricket for all four wins, and Gareth Batty was head coach for the last three.
Since the club's formation, its official colour has been chocolate brown. Traditionally, and in current first-class matches, Surrey fielders wear a browncricket cap with theircricket whites, whilst batsmen wear a brown helmet. As a result, the club is occasionally nicknamed the 'Brown Caps'.[5][6]
Surrey's badge is a brown shield with whitePrince of Wales's feathers and the club name. The feathers were adopted in 1915, whenLord Rosebery (a former Surrey captain) obtained permission to use them from thePrince of Wales, whoseDuchy of Cornwall estate is thelandlord of The Oval.[4] The feathers on the badge incorporate the number 1845, the year of the club's establishment.
Surrey'slimited overs sides have played under a variety of names. The name Surrey Lions was used prior to 2006 and from 2010 to 2012, whilst from 2006 to 2010 they were the Surrey Brown Caps. They currently simply use the one-word name Surrey. They have also used numerous colours for their limited overs kits, including combinations of black, blue, brown, beige, gold, silver and green.[47] Currently, players wear a predominantly black kit with fluorescent blue decoration for one-day matches, and black trousers with fluorescent blue shirts forT20 games.
Since their formation, Surrey have played the overwhelming majority of their home matches atThe Oval. The stadium currently holds 25,500 people and is the third largest cricket ground in England, afterLord's andEdgbaston. The Oval was first leased by the club in 1845 from theDuchy of Cornwall and it remains so to this day.
The Oval is a long-standing and frequentTest match venue for theEngland cricket team, traditionally hosting the lastTest match of each English summer, in late August or early September.
Surrey play some matches each year at Woodbridge Road,Guildford, which holds 4,500 spectators. This is known as an 'out-ground' and currently hosts one County Championship match and one List A match each season. All other home matches are played at The Oval.
Surrey have played home matches at fourteen different out-grounds in total. The Oval hosted all but two Surrey home matches between 1846 and 1938. The following table gives details of every venue at which Surrey have hosted men's first-class, List A or Twenty20 cricket matches:
| Name of ground | Location | Year | FC matches | LA matches | T20 matches | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Oval | Kennington | 1846–present | 1850 | 458 | 127 | 2435 |
| Woodbridge Road | Guildford | 1938–present | 100 | 44 | 0 | 144 |
| Whitgift School | Croydon | 2000–2011 | 9 | 13 | 1 | 23 |
| British Aerospace Company Ground | Byfleet | 1970–1979 | 0 | 10 | 0 | 10 |
| Kenton Court Meadow | Sunbury-on-Thames | 1972–1974 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 3 |
| Hawker's Sports Ground | Kingston-upon-Thames | 1946 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| St John's School | Leatherhead | 1969–1972 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| Metropolitan Police Sports Club Ground | East Molesey | 2003 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
| Broadwater Park | Godalming | 1854 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Reigate Priory Cricket Club Ground | Reigate | 1909 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Cheam Road | Sutton | 1969 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Charterhouse School | Godalming | 1972 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Decca Sports Ground | Tolworth | 1973 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Hurst Park Club Ground | East Molesey | 1983 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Recreation Ground | Banstead | 1984 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Source:CricketArchive Updated: 3 April 2023 | ||||||

Surrey contest the Londonderby withMiddlesex, so-called because of the two traditional counties' proximity to, and overlap with, today'sGreater London, which was only created in 1965. The match generally draws the biggest crowds of the season for either team.[48] In first-class cricket, Surrey have won more of the 256 London derbies than Middlesex, but the commonest result is the draw, while Middlesex have the slight edge in one-day cricket with 28 wins to Surrey's 26. Surrey have won 12 of the 17 Twenty20 London derbies.
| Match format | Played | Surrey win | Middlesex win | Tie | Draw or no result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First-class | 267 | 90 | 78 | 2 | 97 |
| One-day | 61 | 26 | 28 | 1 | 6 |
| Twenty20 | 17 | 12 | 5 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 334 | 127 | 107 | 3 | 97 |
Surrey County Cricket Club traditionally has relatively strong finances in terms of the county game (whose 18 counties' aggregate losses amounted to over £9 million in 2010), which is in no small part due to the capability of and agreement with its principal home ground, The Oval, to stage Test cricket on a yearly basis, alongside limited overs internationals.[49][50] However, despite its reputation as an aggressively commercial club, this reputation took a hit with the club announcing pre-tax losses of £502,000 for the 2010 financial year, as turnover dropped by 20% to £20.5m. The club had previously benefited from a sunnier balance sheet due to the sale of ground naming rights and the re-development of the Vauxhall End at The Oval.[51]
In the 2008 financial year, a year when the club did not win a single match in the Second Division Championship, Surrey had achieved pre-tax profits of £583,000 with a turnover of approaching £24 million, as membership swelled to 10,113.[52] Record profit and turnover were announced for 2009 thanks to the staging of international cricket matches with the figures growing to £752,000 and £25.5 million, respectively.[53] In 2010, the club was in a state of "financial strife," with twenty staff fired after lackluster attendance. The club began focusing under new leadership in 2011 on marketing the Oval.[54]
Between 2007 and 2020, the club had a period of "steady revenue growth," and in 2020, the club was in the process of building a 95-room hotel across the road from the Oval House, to "diversify" its revenue mix.[55] Surrey CCC launched a bond in September 2019 to fund redeveloping the Oval cricket ground.[56] By 2020, its "off-field arm" brought in half the club's revenue.[54] The club's finance director in March 2020 said a "record-breaking season" at the Kia Oval in 2019 would cushion the club from the financial impact of COVID-19. Events at the venue as well as "wider interest in cricket, resulted in a record year with annual pre-tax profit at around £6m that more than doubled the previous year’s profits and revenue of £40m," which was 30 per cent higher than 2018.[55]

Surrey's current main sponsor isKia Motors, who paid £3.5m over five years to sponsor the shirts and the groundnaming rights for The Oval.[57] Former main sponsors wereBrit plc who paid £500,000.00 per year (2004 to 2009)[58] andAMP Limited who paid £250,000 (2002).[59] Since 2023, the kit supplier has beenCastore.[60]
| Year | Kit Manufacturer | Shirt Sponsor | The Oval Name[note 1] |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1989 | TheFoster's Oval[61] | ||
| 1990 | |||
| 1991 | |||
| 1992 | |||
| 1993 | |||
| 1994 | |||
| 1995 | |||
| 1996 | |||
| 1997 | |||
| 1998 | |||
| 1999 | Computacenter[62] | ||
| 2000 | Exito | ||
| 2001 | The AMP Oval[61] | ||
| 2002 | AMP[59] | ||
| 2003 | RAC[63] | ||
| 2004 | Surridge Sport[64] | Brit Insurance[57] | The Brit Oval[61] |
| 2005 | |||
| 2006 | |||
| 2007 | |||
| 2008 | |||
| 2009 | |||
| 2010 | Prostar Sports | ||
| 2011 | MKK Sports | Kia[57] | The Kia Oval[61] |
| 2012 | |||
| 2013 | Surridge Sport | ||
| 2014 | |||
| 2015 | Under Armour[65] | ||
| 2016 | Adidas[66] | ||
| 2017 | |||
| 2018 | |||
| 2019 | |||
| 2020 | |||
| 2021 | |||
| 2022 | |||
| 2023 | Castore[60] |
| No. | Name | Nat | Birth date | Batting style | Bowling style | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Batters | ||||||
| 9 | Will Jacks* ‡ | (1998-11-21)21 November 1998 (age 27) | Right-handed | Right-armoff break | England central contract | |
| 10 | Laurie Evans* | (1987-10-12)12 October 1987 (age 38) | Right-handed | Right-armmedium | ||
| 17 | Rory Burns* ‡ | (1990-08-26)26 August 1990 (age 35) | Left-handed | Right-armmedium | Club captain | |
| 20 | Jason Roy* ‡ | (1990-07-21)21 July 1990 (age 35) | Right-handed | Right-armmedium | ||
| 28 | Dan Lawrence ‡ | (1997-07-12)12 July 1997 (age 28) | Right-handed | Right-armoff break | ||
| 32 | Ollie Pope* ‡ | (1998-01-02)2 January 1998 (age 27) | Right-handed | Right-armleg break | England central contract | |
| 45 | Dom Sibley* ‡ | (1995-09-05)5 September 1995 (age 30) | Right-handed | Right-armleg break | Vice captain | |
| 54 | Ollie Sykes | (2005-03-06)6 March 2005 (age 20) | Left-handed | Right-armmedium | ||
| 64 | Adam Thomas | (2006-07-06)6 July 2006 (age 19) | Right-handed | Right-armmedium | ||
| 75 | Nikhil Gorantla | (2003-06-21)21 June 2003 (age 22) | Right-handed | Right-armmedium | ||
| All-rounders | ||||||
| 5 | Tommy Ealham | (2004-03-26)26 March 2004 (age 21) | Left-handed | Right-armoff break | ||
| 16 | Jordan Clark* | (1990-10-14)14 October 1990 (age 35) | Right-handed | Right-armfast-medium | ||
| 22 | Ralphie Albert | (2007-10-16)16 October 2007 (age 18) | Right-handed | Slow left-arm orthodox | ||
| 26 | Ryan Patel* | (1997-10-26)26 October 1997 (age 28) | Left-handed | Right-armmedium | ||
| 30 | Tom Lawes | (2002-12-25)25 December 2002 (age 22) | Right-handed | Right-armfast-medium | England development contract | |
| 34 | Chris Jordan* ‡ | (1988-10-04)4 October 1988 (age 37) | Right-handed | Right-armfast-medium | ||
| 44 | Cameron Steel | (1995-09-13)13 September 1995 (age 30) | Right-handed | Right-armleg break | ||
| 58 | Sam Curran* ‡ | (1998-06-03)3 June 1998 (age 27) | Left-handed | Left-armfast-medium | T20 captain; England central contract | |
| 59 | Tom Curran* ‡ | (1995-03-12)12 March 1995 (age 30) | Right-handed | Right-armfast-medium | ||
| 88 | Jamie Overton* ‡ | (1994-04-10)10 April 1994 (age 31) | Right-handed | Right-armfast | England central contract | |
| Wicket-keepers | ||||||
| 7 | Ben Foakes* ‡ | (1993-02-15)15 February 1993 (age 32) | Right-handed | — | ||
| 11 | Jamie Smith* ‡ | (2000-07-12)12 July 2000 (age 25) | Right-handed | — | England central contract | |
| 18 | Josh Blake | (1998-09-18)18 September 1998 (age 27) | Right-handed | Right-armleg break | ||
| Bowlers | ||||||
| 8 | Daniel Worrall* ‡ | (1991-07-10)10 July 1991 (age 34) | Right-handed | Right-armfast-medium | UK Passport | |
| 15 | Matthew Fisher ‡ | (1997-11-09)9 November 1997 (age 28) | Right-handed | Right-armfast-medium | ||
| 23 | Alex French | (2007-07-23)23 July 2007 (age 18) | Right-handed | Right-armfast-medium | ||
| 24 | Reece Topley ‡ | (1994-02-21)21 February 1994 (age 31) | Right-handed | Left-armfast-medium | ||
| 25 | James Taylor | (2001-01-19)19 January 2001 (age 24) | Right-handed | Right-armfast-medium | ||
| 27 | Seb Stuart-Reckling | (2005-04-18)18 April 2005 (age 20) | Right-handed | Left-armfast-medium | ||
| 29 | Nathan Barnwell | (2003-02-03)3 February 2003 (age 22) | Right-handed | Right-armfast-medium | ||
| 37 | Gus Atkinson* ‡ | (1998-01-19)19 January 1998 (age 27) | Right-handed | Right-armfast-medium | England central contract | |
| 68 | Yousef Majid | (2003-09-08)8 September 2003 (age 22) | Left-handed | Slow left-arm orthodox | ||
The following cricketers have made 200 or more appearances for Surrey in first-class, List A and Twenty20 cricket combined.
Surrey have had 41 clubcaptains since 1846. The club captain leads the team on the field, unless he is on international duty, injured or otherwise unavailable. Surrey's most successful County Championship captain is Stuart Surridge, who won the title in each year of his captaincy in a five-year run stretching from 1952 to 1956. The current captain since his appointment in 2018 isRory Burns. For the 2018 season onwards, the club announced the creation of a separate captain specifically forTwenty20 matches, with experienced bowlerJade Dernbach being appointed to the role.[67]
The position of president is an honorary one. The president does not take a salary and is chosen from supporters of the club. Past presidents have included formerprime ministerSir John Major[68] and the newsreaderSir Trevor McDonald.[69] Former players to have held the post includeJohn Edrich.[70]
The chief executive is the official in charge of the day-to-day running of the club. Prior to 1993, the position was known as secretary.

| No. | Name | Years |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | William Denison | 1845–1848 |
| 2 | John Burrup | 1848–1855[71] |
| 3 | William Burrup | 1855–1872[72] |
| 4 | C. W. Alcock | 1872–1907[73][74] |
| 5 | Brian Castor | 1947–1957[75] |
| 6 | Geoffrey Howard | 1965–1975[76] |
| 7 | W. H. Sillitoe | 1975–1978[77] |
| 8 | Ian Scott-Browne | 1978–1989[78] |
| 9 | David Seward | 1989–1992[79] |
| 10 | Glyn Woodman | 1993–1995[80] |
| 11 | Paul Sheldon | 1996–2011[81] |
| 12 | Richard Gould | 2011–2021[82] |
| 13 | Steve Elworthy | 2021 to date[83] |
Brown Caps wicketkeeper Ben Foakes