FIFA World Cup 2026 · Updated June 2026
FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualified Teams List 2026
Quick answer
All 48 teams are confirmed across 12 groups (A–L). The full list by group, plus debut nations, is below.
All 48 qualified teams by group
The 2026 FIFA World Cup runs from June 11 to July 19, 2026, hosted across 16 cities in the United States, Canada and Mexico. It is the first 48-team edition, with 104 matches in total. This guide is written focused on the viewing experience — the screens, devices and settings that make a 104-match tournament easy to follow at home. The full field is confirmed below.
| Group | Teams |
|---|---|
| Group A | Mexico, South Africa, South Korea, Czechia |
| Group B | Canada, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Qatar, Switzerland |
| Group C | Brazil, Morocco, Haiti, Scotland |
| Group D | United States, Paraguay, Australia, Türkiye |
| Group E | Germany, Curacao, Ivory Coast, Ecuador |
| Group F | Netherlands, Japan, Sweden, Tunisia |
| Group G | Belgium, Egypt, Iran, New Zealand |
| Group H | Spain, Cape Verde, Saudi Arabia, Uruguay |
| Group I | France, Senegal, Iraq, Norway |
| Group J | Argentina, Algeria, Austria, Jordan |
| Group K | Portugal, Congo DR, Uzbekistan, Colombia |
| Group L | England, Croatia, Ghana, Panama |
Debut nations
Making their first World Cup appearance: Cape Verde, Curacao, Uzbekistan, Jordan.
Frequently asked questions
When is the 2026 World Cup?
It runs from June 11 to July 19, 2026, across the USA, Canada and Mexico.
How many teams play?
48 teams in 12 groups of four — the first 48-team World Cup, with 104 matches.
Where is the final?
At MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on July 19, 2026.
Which teams debut in 2026?
Cape Verde, Curaçao, Uzbekistan and Jordan.
How many teams?
48 in 12 groups of four.
Related resources
General information about the 2026 FIFA World Cup. To watch matches, follow the official broadcaster in your region. FIFA and FIFA World Cup are trademarks of FIFA; this page is independent and not affiliated with or endorsed by FIFA. Verify all dates and ticket details against official FIFA sources.