World Cup Teams 2026: The Complete Guide to All 48 Qualified Nations

Last Updated on 11/06/2026 by TinHN Editor

Meet all 48 World Cup teams 2026 — full list by group, confederation, debutants, notable absences, dark horses, and key storylines for the historic FIFA tournament in the USA, Canada & Mexico.

🔴 Tournament Underway: All 48 teams are now in action. Mexico opened the tournament against South Africa on June 11, with South Korea vs Czechia following in the other Group A fixture. Squad lists below are final — check back for updates on injuries and standout performers as the group stage unfolds.


Introduction: The Biggest World Cup in History

The 2026 FIFA World Cup is the most expansive edition of the tournament ever staged. For the first time in history, 48 national teams will compete across three co-host nations — the United States, Canada, and Mexico — from June 11 to July 19, 2026. That’s a 50% increase from the 32-team format used since France 1998, and it fundamentally changes the tournament’s dynamics, upsets potential, and global reach, according to ESPN.

All 48 teams are split into 12 groups of 4. The top two finishers from each group advance automatically to a brand-new Round of 32, joined by the 8 best third-place teams. From there, single-elimination knockout rounds run through the Round of 16, Quarterfinals, Semifinals, and the World Cup Final at MetLife Stadium on July 19, 2026.


All 48 World Cup Teams 2026: Complete List by Group

The official draw, held on December 5, 2025, confirmed the following 12 groups:

GroupTeams
A🇲🇽 Mexico · 🇿🇦 South Africa · 🇰🇷 South Korea · 🇨🇿 Czechia
B🇨🇦 Canada · 🇧🇦 Bosnia & Herzegovina · 🇶🇦 Qatar · 🇨🇭 Switzerland
C🇧🇷 Brazil · 🇲🇦 Morocco · 🇭🇹 Haiti · 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Scotland
D🇺🇸 USA · 🇵🇾 Paraguay · 🇦🇺 Australia · 🇹🇷 Türkiye
E🇩🇪 Germany · 🇨🇼 Curaçao · 🇨🇮 Ivory Coast · 🇪🇨 Ecuador
F🇳🇱 Netherlands · 🇯🇵 Japan · 🇸🇪 Sweden · 🇹🇳 Tunisia
G🇧🇪 Belgium · 🇪🇬 Egypt · 🇮🇷 Iran · 🇳🇿 New Zealand
H🇪🇸 Spain · 🇨🇻 Cape Verde · 🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia · 🇺🇾 Uruguay
I🇫🇷 France · 🇸🇳 Senegal · 🇮🇶 Iraq · 🇳🇴 Norway
J🇦🇷 Argentina · 🇩🇿 Algeria · 🇦🇹 Austria · 🇯🇴 Jordan
K🇵🇹 Portugal · 🇨🇩 DR Congo · 🇺🇿 Uzbekistan · 🇨🇴 Colombia
L🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 England · 🇭🇷 Croatia · 🇬🇭 Ghana · 🇵🇦 Panama

Full United States 2026 FIFA World Cup™ 26-Man Roster Reveal


How Are the 48 Spots Distributed? Confederation Breakdown

The expanded format gave every confederation more representation than ever before:

ConfederationTeamsNotable Qualifiers
UEFA (Europe)16England, France, Spain, Germany, Portugal, Netherlands, Belgium, Croatia, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, Austria, Czechia, Scotland, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Türkiye
CAF (Africa)9Morocco, Senegal, Egypt, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Algeria, South Africa, Tunisia, DR Congo (playoff)
AFC (Asia)8Japan, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Australia, Iran, Qatar, Uzbekistan, Jordan
CONMEBOL (South America)6Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Uruguay, Paraguay
CONCACAF (N/C America & Caribbean)6USA, Mexico, Canada (hosts), Panama, Haiti, Curaçao
OFC (Oceania)1New Zealand
Intercontinental Playoffs2DR Congo (beat Jamaica), Iraq (beat Bolivia)

UEFA secured the largest single-confederation allocation in World Cup history — 16 spots from a continent that already dominates global football rankings.

Fifa World Cup 2026 fixtures, schedule

The Three Host Nations

USA, Canada, and Mexico qualified automatically as co-hosts. This trio forms part of the CONCACAF allocation of 6 spots, meaning only three additional CONCACAF nations could qualify through the normal qualifying campaign (Panama, Haiti, and Curaçao).

  • 🇺🇸 United States — hosts 11 venues including MetLife Stadium (final), AT&T Stadium, Rose Bowl, and Lumen Field
  • 🇲🇽 Mexico — hosts 3 venues including the iconic Estadio Azteca, scene of the tournament’s opening match on June 11
  • 🇨🇦 Canada — hosts 2 venues: BC Place (Vancouver) and BMO Field (Toronto)
World Cup 2026 stadiums

World Cup 2026 Debutants: Four Nations on the Global Stage for the First Time

One of the most compelling storylines of the 2026 tournament is the arrival of four first-time World Cup nations:

🇨🇻 Cape Verde

The Cape Verdean archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean makes its World Cup debut in Group H alongside Spain, Saudi Arabia, and Uruguay. Their qualification represents one of African football’s most remarkable stories — a tiny island nation punching far above its weight.

🇨🇼 Curaçao

The smallest nation ever to qualify for a FIFA World Cup, with a population of just ~170,000. Curaçao are placed in Group E with Germany, Ivory Coast, and Ecuador. Their rise through CONCACAF qualifiers is a remarkable tale of development and determination.

🇯🇴 Jordan

Jordan makes their World Cup debut in Group J — arguably the toughest draw they could have received, facing defending champions Argentina, Austria, and Algeria. Jordan qualified through the AFC third-round playoffs.

🇺🇿 Uzbekistan

Uzbekistan enter the global stage in Group K alongside Portugal, DR Congo, and Colombia. Notably, the team is coached by Fabio Cannavaro — the 2006 World Cup winner — making this one of the most intriguing debut storylines of the tournament.


Historic Returns: Nations Back After Long Absences

Several nations return to the World Cup after extended gaps:

  • 🇳🇴 NorwayFirst World Cup since 1998 (28-year gap). Erling Haaland scored 16 qualifying goals, including a double over Italy. Norway’s return is one of the most anticipated storylines of the entire tournament.
  • 🇭🇹 Haiti — First World Cup since 1974 (52 years)
  • 🇨🇩 DR Congo — Returns via intercontinental playoff, beating Jamaica
  • 🇮🇶 Iraq — First World Cup since 1986 (40 years), qualified by beating Bolivia in the playoff
  • 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Scotland — Returns to the World Cup for the first time since 1998
Erling Haaland was the standout performer in European qualifying — scoring 16 goals to fire Norway to their first World Cup since 1998, including two decisive wins over Italy.

Notable Absences: Big Nations Who Didn’t Make It

The expanded format was supposed to make qualification easier — yet several historically powerful nations still failed to qualify:

🇮🇹 Italy — Third Consecutive Absence

The biggest shock of the entire qualification cycle. Italy, four-time world champions and 2021 European champions, miss the World Cup for an unprecedented third consecutive edition (2018, 2022, 2026). Their playoff defeat to Bosnia & Herzegovina on penalties — with Alessandro Bastoni’s red card proving decisive — caps a decade of structural decline in Italian football.

🇳🇬 Nigeria — Africa’s Most Painful Absence

Nigeria, Africa’s most prominent footballing nation, miss their second consecutive World Cup despite boasting a golden generation including Victor Osimhen and Ademola Lookman.

🇵🇱 Poland

Robert Lewandowski’s era ends without a World Cup appearance this cycle. Poland were eliminated by Sweden in the UEFA playoff final.

🇩🇰 Denmark

Euro 2020 semi-finalists Denmark fell to Czechia on penalties in the UEFA playoff.

🇨🇲 Cameroon

Despite their thrilling 2022 campaign (including a memorable win over Brazil), Cameroon fell to DR Congo in the CAF qualifying semifinals.

🇷🇺 Russia

Banned by FIFA and UEFA from all competitions following the invasion of Ukraine — not permitted to enter qualifying at all.


Groups to Watch: The “Groups of Death” and More

Group C — Brazil, Morocco, Scotland, Haiti

Perhaps the most electrifying group in the tournament. Brazil vs. Morocco is a genuine heavyweight clash — two of the best-organized defensive teams in world football meeting in what could be the game of the group stage.

Group I — France, Norway, Senegal, Iraq

France vs. Norway could be the group-stage match of the tournament. Erling Haaland vs. Kylian Mbappé is as high a billing as it gets at any World Cup. France are strong favorites to top the group, but Norway are dangerous.

Group L — England, Croatia, Ghana, Panama

A rematch of England vs. Croatia (2018 semifinal, 2021 EURO final) in the group stage is one of the most anticipated clashes of the opening rounds.

Group K — Portugal, Colombia, DR Congo, Uzbekistan

Cristiano Ronaldo’s final World Cup? Portugal and Colombia are the favorites, but coach Fabio Cannavaro’s Uzbekistan debut adds a fascinating subplot.


World Cup Teams 2026: The Favorites to Win

Based on current betting markets and expert analysis:

TeamGroupTournament OddsKey Player
🇫🇷 FranceICo-favoriteKylian Mbappé
🇪🇸 SpainHCo-favoritePedri
🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 EnglandLTop 3Jude Bellingham
🇦🇷 ArgentinaJTop 5 (defending champions)Julián Álvarez
🇧🇷 BrazilCTop 5Vinícius Júnior
🇵🇹 PortugalKDark horseCristiano Ronaldo
🇩🇪 GermanyEOutsiderFlorian Wirtz
France enter the 2026 World Cup as one of the top favorites, with Kylian Mbappé leading a squad of world-class talent built around two previous World Cup titles.
France enter the 2026 World Cup as one of the top favorites, with Kylian Mbappé leading a squad of world-class talent built around two previous World Cup titles.

World Cup 2026 Players to Watch: 10 Stars

With 48 teams and 104 matches, the 2026 World Cup will produce more individual moments
than any edition in history. These are the players most likely to dominate headlines —
from established legends chasing a final chapter to rising stars ready to announce
themselves to the world.

🇫🇷 Kylian Mbappé (France) — The Favourite

Position: Striker | Club: Real Madrid | Age at tournament: 27

The reigning Golden Boot holder (8 goals in Qatar 2022) arrives at his peak. Now leading
Real Madrid’s attack, Mbappé enters 2026 as the undisputed frontrunner for top scorer.
France’s Group I draw — featuring Iraq, Senegal, and Norway — gives him an ideal platform
to build an early lead. At 6/1, he is the favourite in virtually every betting market.

Watch him when: France vs Iraq (Group I opener)

🇦🇷 Lionel Messi (Argentina) — The Final Chapter

Position: Forward | Club: Inter Miami | Age at tournament: 38

This is almost certainly Messi’s last World Cup — and the defending champions will be
built around him. Messi lifted the trophy in Qatar 2022 and was named Player of the
Tournament. In Group J alongside Algeria, Austria, and Jordan, Argentina have a
comfortable route. Whether Messi can sustain his level for a full 7-match run is the
defining question of the tournament.

Watch him when: Argentina vs Algeria (Group J)

🇳🇴 Erling Haaland (Norway) — The Wildcard

Position: Striker | Club: Manchester City | Age at tournament: 25

The most clinical finisher in world football has never played at a senior World Cup.
Norway’s qualification ends that — and Haaland brings a 55-goal-in-48-games international
record with him. Norway face France, Senegal, and Iraq in Group I, meaning Haaland could
face Mbappé in a group-stage blockbuster. The main question: can Norway advance deep
enough for Haaland to accumulate Golden Boot numbers?

Watch him when: France vs Norway (the Group I standout clash)

🇪🇸 Lamine Yamal (Spain) — The Teenage Phenomenon

Position: Right Winger | Club: FC Barcelona | Age at tournament: 19

The youngest player ever to represent Spain at a major tournament became a European
Champion at 16. By 2026 he will be 19 — technically mature but still a generational
talent operating at full intensity. Spain’s Group H (Cape Verde, Saudi Arabia, Uruguay)
should allow Yamal to build rhythm early. He’s the most exciting young player in the
world right now.

Watch him when: Any Spain knockout match

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Harry Kane (England) — The Pressure Release

Position: Striker | Club: Bayern Munich | Age at tournament: 32

Kane has never won a major trophy at club or international level. England’s World Cup
campaign feels like his last realistic chance to change that. Second-favourite for the
Golden Boot (+700), he’s Bayern’s top scorer and arrives in form. England face Croatia,
Ghana, and Panama in Group L — three opponents Kane will relish.

Watch him when: England vs Croatia (Group L — rematch of the 2018 semi-final)

🇵🇹 Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal) — Record-Setting Farewell

Position: Forward | Club: Al-Nassr | Age at tournament: 41

Love him or not, a 41-year-old Ronaldo competing at a sixth World Cup is an extraordinary
storyline. Portugal are legitimate contenders with or without him, but Ronaldo’s presence
transforms every match into a spectacle. Group K (DR Congo, Uzbekistan, Colombia) is
manageable. Whether he starts every game is less certain than in years past — but he will
play, and he will score.

Watch him when: Any Portugal match where he starts

🇩🇪 Florian Wirtz (Germany) — Europe’s Next Star

Position: Attacking Midfielder | Club: Bayer Leverkusen / Bayern Munich | Age: 23

Germany haven’t won a World Cup since 2014, and Wirtz represents their best chance in a
decade. His creative vision, pressing intensity, and goal contribution rate at club level
have drawn comparisons to the great German number 10s. Group E (Curaçao, Ivory Coast,
Ecuador) is comfortable. Expect Germany to be dangerous in the knockout rounds.

Watch him when: Germany’s knockout stage games

🇧🇷 Vinicius Jr (Brazil) — South America’s Danger Man

Position: Left Winger | Club: Real Madrid | Age at tournament: 25

Brazil enter the 2026 World Cup determined to end a 24-year wait for the trophy. Vinicius
is their most electric player — a direct, explosive winger who can change a match in
seconds. Group C (Morocco, Haiti, Scotland) should see Brazil advance comfortably. The
question is whether Vinicius can produce his best football on the biggest stage.

Watch him when: Brazil vs Morocco (Group C)

🇯🇵 Takefusa Kubo (Japan) — Asia’s Flag-Bearer

Position: Winger | Club: Real Sociedad | Age at tournament: 25

Japan have been one of the most pleasant surprises of recent World Cups, defeating Spain
and Germany in Qatar 2022. Kubo — nicknamed “the Japanese Messi” during his youth career
— is now a consistent performer in La Liga. Japan face Netherlands, Sweden, and Tunisia
in Group F in what.

Track the Golden Boot race → our top scorer predictions:


Dark Horses to Follow in 2026

🇲🇦 Morocco (Group C)

Following their historic 2022 semifinal run, Morocco arrive ranked 8th in the world and as reigning Africa Cup of Nations champions. They were perfect in qualifying and possess the tactical discipline to beat anyone in the knockout rounds.

🇳🇴 Norway (Group I)

Erling Haaland leads a team that won all 8 qualifying matches. If Haaland and Martin Ødegaard click in North America, Norway could be the tournament’s biggest story. Their reward? Opening Group I against France — the perfect statement game.

🇪🇨 Ecuador (Group E)

Ecuador conceded just 5 goals in 18 qualifying games, the best defensive record in CONMEBOL. No team has beaten them since the start of 2025. PSG defender Willian Pacho and Chelsea’s Moisés Caicedo anchor a resilient side that could be the surprise package of the tournament.


Key Dates for World Cup Teams 2026

StageDates
Group Stage beginsJune 11, 2026 (Mexico vs South Africa, Estadio Azteca)
Group Stage endsJune 27–28, 2026
Round of 32June 29 – July 4, 2026
Round of 16July 5–8, 2026
QuarterfinalsJuly 10–11, 2026
SemifinalsJuly 14–15, 2026
Third-place matchJuly 18, 2026
World Cup FinalJuly 19, 2026 — MetLife Stadium, New Jersey

Frequently Asked Questions: World Cup Teams 2026

How many teams are in the 2026 World Cup?

48 teams — the most in World Cup history. This is a 50% increase from the 32-team format used since 1998.

Which teams qualified automatically?

The three host nations — the United States, Canada, and Mexico — qualified automatically.

Which teams are making their World Cup debut in 2026?

Four nations debut: Cape Verde, Curaçao, Jordan, and Uzbekistan.

Who are the favorites to win?

France and Spain enter as co-favorites according to most major betting markets, with England, Argentina, and Brazil close behind.

Which major nation is missing from the 2026 World Cup?

Italy is the most shocking absence — the four-time world champions miss the tournament for the third consecutive time. Nigeria, Denmark, Poland, and Cameroon are also notably absent.

When does the tournament start?

June 11, 2026, with Mexico vs. South Africa at Estadio Azteca in Mexico City.

What is the format for World Cup 2026?

12 groups of 4 teams. Top two from each group advance, plus 8 best third-place teams = 32-team knockout bracket, starting with a new Round of 32.


ARGENTINA Final Squad Announcement


France Official World Cup 2026 Squad


Netherlands Official Squad For FIFA World Cup 2026


MEXICO Official World Cup 2026 Squad Announced


Ghana’s World Cup 2026 Squad Announcement


Conclusion: 48 Teams, One Dream

The World Cup teams 2026 represent the most diverse and competitive field in tournament history. From Curaçao’s fairy-tale debut to Italy’s heartbreaking absence, from Haaland’s long-awaited World Cup to Argentina’s title defense, every group carries multiple storylines worth following. Whether you’re filling in a bracket, tracking your favorite nation, or just diving into football’s greatest spectacle for the first time — the 2026 FIFA World Cup promises 104 matches of unforgettable football across 16 stadiums and three nations.


Last updated: May 27, 2026. All team data verified against official FIFA tournament information.

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