Liv AlUla Jayco

[3] Martin Barras maintains his dual role as the trade team Orica–AIS assistant DS since 2012, and Cycling Australia's woman's road coach.

[7] Former road race world championship silver medallist Rachel Neylan joined Orica–AIS at the end of March.

[13] Valentina Scandolara moved to Cylance looking to advance a more leadership role and hoping to secure an Olympic placement.

[14] Three new signings were announced for 2016, from the disbanded Velocio-SRAM American Tayler Wiles and Australian Loren Rowney, and from Bigla Dutch Annemiek van Vleuten.

[27][28] The roster of riders for 2017 remained largely the same as the 2016 season closing, but with Orica–AIS not keeping Tayler Wiles due to an uncertain 2017 budget for GreenEDGE as Orica prepares for its final year as sponsor.

[33] Orica–Scott would sign long time BePink team member Georgia Williams from New Zealand who had taken a pause from road racing to focus on the track at the Rio Olympics.

On the eve of the world championship time trial, Orica–Scott announced its first signing for 2018 that Annemiek van Vleuten would extend her contract with the team for another two years.

[43] Kat Garfoot confirmed that she would not renew her contract with the team, but she would still continue to work towards her home 2018 Commonwealth Games at the Gold Coast, with GreenEDGE providing access to her familiar bikes.

[45][46] The team starts 2018 with ten riders; Allen, Crooks, D'hoore, Kennedy, Manly, Spratt, Williams signing for one year.

[48][49] In between 2017 and 2018 seasons, former directeur sportif Martin Barras was removed as the Cycling Australia's national women's road coach after the September's Bergen 2017 road world championships as a part of restructuring by Cycling Australia's new high performance director Simon Jones, his last race directing Orica–Scott was the women's Tour of Guangxi in October.

Georgia Williams followed up her time trial win the previous day by claiming the elite road race title in a solo breakaway, gaping the peloton by just under five minutes at the finish line.

Alexandra repeated her 2017 nationals results by again winning the under-23 classification in the road race; in the elites, Amanda Spratt missed out on a podium, finishing fourth in a seven rider sprint.

[55][56] The team claimed its first European race win with newly signed sprinter Jolien D'Hoore at the inaugural Three Days De Panne Koksijde.

In July, the Mitchelton–Scott women's team achieve the GreenEDGE organisation's first Grand Tour win at the 2018 Giro Rosa.

Ahead of the 2018 UCI Road World Championships, half of the team's ten members were selected to represent their country, for Australia, Lucy Kennedy, Sarah Roy, and Amanda Spratt, for New Zealand, Georgia Williams, and for the Netherlands, Annemiek van Vleuten.

Former Mitchelton–Scott logo