Wales national netball team
| Nickname(s) | Welsh Feathers | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Association | Wales Netball | ||
| Confederation | Europe Netball | ||
| Head coach | Emily Handyside | ||
| Captain | Bethan Dyke | ||
| Most caps | Suzy Drane (125) | ||
| World ranking | 7th | ||
| |||
| First international | |||
| Wales 14–13 Scotland GEC Ground, Wembley, 7 May 1949 | |||
| Netball World Cup | |||
| Appearances | 14 (Debuted in 1963) | ||
| 2023 placing | 9th | ||
| Best result | 6th (1975, 1979) | ||
| Commonwealth Games | |||
| Appearances | 5 (Debuted in 2002) | ||
| 2022 placing | 8th | ||
| Best result | 6th (2002) | ||
The Wales national netball team, also known as the Welsh Feathers, represents Wales Netball in international netball competitions such as the Netball World Cup, the Commonwealth Games, the Netball Europe Open Championships, Netball World Cup Qualifiers and the Netball Singapore Nations Cup. Since 2005–06, Wales has also effectively competed in the Netball Super League, initially playing as Celtic Dragons and more recently as LexisNexis Dragons. As of March 2026, Wales are listed 7th on the World Netball Rankings, making the squad the highest ranked international sport in Wales.