Close Menu
21stNews21stNews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Jets’ Kris Boyd in critical condition after being shot in NYC

    November 17, 2025

    A16z’s Sees Arcade Tokens As Key To Crypto Evolution

    November 17, 2025

    Japan travel stocks sink as China-Japan spat deepens

    November 17, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    21stNews21stNews
    • Home
    • Global News
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Financial News
    • Sports
    Subscribe
    21stNews21stNews
    Home»Sports»2026 World Cup: Who has qualified, and how the rest can make it
    Sports

    2026 World Cup: Who has qualified, and how the rest can make it

    IsmailKhanBy IsmailKhanOctober 10, 202518 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Qualifying for the 2026 FIFA World Cup began on Oct. 12, 2023, when countries from the Asian confederation played their first round of matches. Myanmar’s Lwin Moe Aung scored the very first goal in a 5-1 win over Macau.

    All confederations are drawing to a close, but we’re still a long way from discovering the full list of 45 nations that will join hosts United States, Mexico and Canada to make up the field of 48.

    Japan were the very first country to qualify on March 20.

    QUALIFIED (17/45): Japan, New Zealand, Iran, Argentina, Uzbekistan, South Korea, Jordan, Australia, Brazil, Ecuador, Uruguay, Colombia, Paraguay, Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt, Algeria

    What can be decided in October?

    Europe and Concacaf: Qualifying doesn’t end until November, but we could see the first few countries book their places.

    Africa: The final two rounds of the group stage take place in October, when we will discover the seven nations that will join Morocco and Tunisia, plus the interconfederation playoff contenders.

    Asia: The fourth round is played in October, when we will find out the final two automatic qualifiers, along with the two interconfederation playoff contenders.

    South America and Oceania: Qualification complete.

    Senegal could book their place at the World Cup on Friday. SEYLLOU/AFP via Getty Images

    There were 54 FIFA-affiliated nations in the draw. However, Eritrea subsequently withdrew.

    Round 1: The teams are in eight groups of six nations, and one group of five (with Eritrea removed).

    The nine group winners qualify for the World Cup.

    This stage began in November 2023 and will be completed with two rounds to be played in October.

    World Cup groups – Africa

    Group A Egypt Burkina Faso Guinea-Bissau Sierra Leone Ethiopia Djibouti
    Group B Senegal DR Congo Mauritania Togo Sudan South Sudan
    Group C Nigeria South Africa Benin Zimbabwe Rwanda Lesotho
    Group D Cameroon Cape Verde Angola Libya Eswatini Mauritius
    Group E Morocco Zambia Congo Tanzania Niger Eritrea
    Group F Ivory Coast Gabon Kenya Gambia Burundi Seychelles
    Group G Algeria Guinea Uganda Mozambique Botswana Somalia
    Group H Tunisia Equatorial Guinea Namibia Malawi Liberia São Tomé
    Group I Mali Ghana Madagascar Cent African Rep Comoros Chad

    How teams can qualify as the group stage ends this week

    NB: To determine the best second-place teams, the results of the team to finish sixth in the six-team groups are removed.

    Group A: EGYPT (23) qualified with a 3-0 win over rock-bottom Djibouti (1) on Wednesday, on the back of two goals from Mohamed Salah. Meanwhile, Burkina Faso (18) sealed second place in the group with a 1-0 victory vs. Sierra Leone (12) but must wait to see if they go onto round two.

    Egypt became the third African nation to qualify for the 2026 World Cup on Wednesday. ABDEL MAJID BZIOUAT/AFP via Getty Images

    Group B: Qualification is in Senegal’s (18) hands ahead of favorable fixtures in South Sudan (4) on Friday and at home to Mauritania (6) on Tuesday, and two wins will guarantee a place in the finals. DR Congo (16) must travel to Togo (7) and host Sudan (12) and hope Senegal slip up. Sudan must win both games (vs. Mauritania and DR Congo) to have a chance at second, but their hopes will be over if DR Congo beat Togo on Friday. Senegal will qualify on Matchday 9 with a win over South Sudan if DR Congo fail to beat Togo.

    Group C: The group has been blown wide open after South Africa (14, +3) saw their 2-0 victory over Lesotho (9) become a 3-0 defeat because they fielded an ineligible player. The punishment dropped South Africa into second place behind Benin (14, +4) on goal difference — and now any one of four nations could still win the group. On Friday, it’s Rwanda (11) vs. Benin and Zimbabwe (1) vs. South Africa. Nigeria (11) cannot be ruled out, playing away in Lesotho on Friday before hosting Benin on Tuesday. On the final day it’s also South Africa vs. Rwanda, meaning the top two places are completely up for grabs. No team can qualify on Matchday 9.

    Group D: Cape Verde Islands (20) missed the chance to book their place when they fought back for a 3-3 draw in Libya (15) on Wednesday. But Cape Verde have another opportunity to secure a debut World Cup appearance by winning at home to Eswatini (3) on Monday (it will also be confirmed regardless if Cameroon draw or lose). If Cape Verde do not win, they would be overtaken by Cameroon (18) if they were to beat Angola (11). While Libya have a mathematical chance of finishing second (if Cameroon lose and Libya win in Mauritius), Libya’s goal difference is 10 worse so, in reality, their opportunity has gone. Cameroon have the best record of the second-placed teams.

    Group E: MOROCCO (21) have qualified. Niger (12) hold second place, three points ahead of Zambia (9); the two teams meet in Zambia on Sunday — Niger need a point to claim second, Zambia must get a victory. However, Niger may need to play to win to have enough points to be one of the best runners-up.

    Group F: Ivory Coast (20) will qualify if they beat the bottom two in October: They are in Seychelles (0) on Friday and at home to Kenya (12) on Tuesday. Any shock slipup opens the door for Gabon (19), who take on a trip to Gambia (10) and host Burundi (10). Ivory Coast will qualify on Matchday 9 if they win in Seychelles and Gabon, who are guaranteed to finish no lower than second, lose to Gambia.

    Group G: ALGERIA (22) qualified with a 3-0 win over Somalia (1) on Thursday. The race for second has been all but sealed too, as Mozambique (15, -4) losing 2-1 to Guinea means they need a win and a goal-difference swing of 10 to overtake Uganda (18, +6). On Tuesday, it’s Somalia vs. Mozambique and Algeria vs. Uganda — so, Uganda do have a tough game, and Mozambique play a team who have conceded 19 goals, but it’s still highly improbable. However, as it stands Uganda are outside the top four runners-up, so need a positive result in Algeria to increase their points.

    Group H: TUNISIA (22) have qualified. It’s now a battle for second, which was blown wide open by Liberia (14) beating Namibia (15) 3-1 on Thursday. Namibia remain in the box seat, but have to travel to Tunisia on Monday needing a win to be certain of second. However, as it stands Namibia have the worst record of all second-placed teams. If Namibia draw or lose, Liberia will move into second place with a victory in Equatorial Guinea (10). Technically, Malawi and Equatorial Guinea can still qualify as they didn’t play each other on Thursday. Equatorial Guinea failed to fly due to “travel complications,” and if Malawi are handed a default win they can still make second with a victory over São Tomé and Príncipe if Namibia lose and Liberia draw or lose.

    Group I: Ghana (22) are in the box seat for qualification after a 5-0 win on Wednesday in Central African Republic (5). Madagascar (19) are three points behind after defeating Comoros 2-1, and are well positioned to be one the best second-placed teams. Ghana need a point at home to Comoros on Sunday, though they are pretty much there as their goal difference is eight better than that of Madagascar.

    Current ranking of second-placed teams:

    1 Cameroon — Played 7, Points 14 (GD +9)
    2 Madagascar — 7, 13 (+3)
    3 Gabon — 6, 13 (+3)
    4 Burkina Faso — 7, 12 (+4)

    ———-
    5 Uganda — 7, 12 (+3)
    6 Niger — 7, 12 (0)
    7 South Africa — 7, 11 (+1)
    8 DR Congo — 6, 10 (+3)
    9 Namibia — 7, 9 (+1)

    – Check out the latest fixtures and results here | Latest tables

    Round 2: The four best runners-up will enter playoffs (two semifinals and a final) to decide which one country will go to the interconfederation playoffs. This stage will be played in November 2025.


    There are 55 European nations, although 54 will compete as Russia remain suspended due to the invasion of Ukraine.

    There are 12 groups of four or five teams, playing home and away matches. The group stage qualifying process continues with double-headers in October, and it’s then completed in November.

    World Cup groups – UEFA

    Group A Germany Slovakia N Ireland Luxembourg –
    Group B Switzerland Sweden Slovenia Kosovo –
    Group C Denmark Greece Scotland Belarus –
    Group D France Ukraine Iceland Azerbaijan –
    Group E Spain Turkey Georgia Bulgaria –
    Group F Portugal Hungary Rep of Ireland Armenia –
    Group G Netherlands Poland Finland Lithuania Malta
    Group H Austria Romania Bosnia Cyrpus San Marino
    Group I Italy Norway Israel Estonia Moldova
    Group J Belgium Wales N Macedonia Kazakhstan Liechtenstein
    Group K England Serbia Albania Latvia Andorra
    Group L Croatia Czechia Montenegro Faroes Gibraltar

    The 12 group winners will qualify directly for the World Cup, with the 12 runners-up entering the playoff system.

    Qualifying began in March 2025 when most of the European teams who were not in UEFA Nations League (UNL) action played their first matches.

    What can be decided in October?

    The teams that were in the UNL finals only played their first games in September so we’re still a way off from discovering the qualifiers — but a few could come in October.

    Group A: Slovakia (6) are top with a 100% record after a shock win over Germany (3). The two teams meet again on the final matchday on Nov. 17. Northern Ireland (3) are also in contention. While Slovakia could mathematically qualify in October, it would require Germany failing to win at home to Luxembourg.

    Group B: Switzerland (6) are in a good position having won both games. With two fixtures to play in October, they could be one of the first to qualify. If the Swiss win in Sweden (1) and Slovenia (1), they will punch their ticket if second-placed Kosovo (3) pick up no more than two points from a home game vs. Slovenia and a trip to Sweden.

    Group C: Denmark (7) and Scotland (7) have control of the group, and Greece (3) will be out of contention on Sunday if they lose away to the Danes and Scotland win at home to Belarus (0). If that does happen, the group will be set up for a decider between Scotland and Denmark in Glasgow on Nov. 18.

    Group D: France (6) have picked up two wins, with Iceland (3) in second. France can qualify in October with victories at home to Azerbaijan (1) and in Iceland, as long as Iceland do not win at home to Ukraine (1), and Ukraine don’t get two victories.

    Group E: Spain (6) are top with a 100% record. They play home games against Georgia (3) and Bulgaria (0) in October, and six points will take them to the World Cup if Turkey (3) fail to win in Bulgaria and Georgia vs. Turkey (3) is a draw.

    Group F: Portugal (6) have won both matches and are close to qualification. If Portugal win at home to Republic of Ireland (1) and Hungary (1), they will be over the line as long as Armenia fail to get a victory in both Hungary and Ireland.

    Cristiano Ronaldo and Portugal could qualify for the World Cup this week. Hrach Khachatryan/ MB Media/Getty Images

    Group G: Netherlands (13) sit top ahead of Poland (10), with Finland (10) having an outside chance. Poland do still have to host Netherlands on Nov. 14, but their goal difference is 11 worse right now — so the Dutch know they can afford to lose that and as long as they win at home to Finland on Sunday and Lithuania (3) on Nov.17 they’ll still top the group.

    Group H: No team can book their place in October but it’s advantage Austria (15) after Bosnia & Herzegovina (13) drew 2-2 in Cyprus (5). Austria have a game in hand, too, so two wins from games against Romania (7) on Sunday, then Bosnia and Cyprus next month, gets them over the line. Romania still have hope of finishing second, as they have played a game fewer, with a trip to Bosnia on Nov. 15.

    Group I: Norway (15) are in control ahead of Italy (9) and Israel (9). Norway’s vastly superior goal difference over Italy (+21 vs. +5) means wins at home to Israel in October and Estonia (3) in November should effectively do the job, even if Italy win in Estonia, at home to Israel and away to Moldova (0). On the final day, it’s Italy vs. Norway, so Italy (who have a game in hand) know they must go all out for goals this month.

    Group J: A very close group between North Macedonia (11), Belgium (10) and Wales (10) — though Belgium have played a game fewer. In October, it’s Belgium vs. North Macedonia and Wales vs. Belgium, two games which will have a major influence on the final outcome.

    Group K: England (15) have dominated the group, winning all five matches without conceding a goal. They have one game in October, away in Latvia (4). They will qualify with a win if Serbia fail to beat either Albania (8) or Andorra (0). A draw cannot see England over the line this month.

    Group L: Croatia and Czechia are locked on 13 points and after the game between the teams finished 0-0 on Thursday it’s advantage Croatia, who have a game in hand. Faroe Islands (9) have a chance to get into the battle for second if they can win at home to Czechia on Sunday, while Croatia entertain Gibraltar (0).

    – Check out the latest fixtures and results here | Tables

    PLAYOFFS

    The final four places at the World Cup will be determined via the UEFA playoffs, to be played in March 2026. There is no path to the World Cup through FIFA’s interconfederation playoffs.

    The UEFA playoffs involve 16 teams: the 12 group stage runners-up plus the four best-ranked group winners from the UNL, who did not finish in the top two in World Cup qualifying. This creates four routes, each with four teams featuring a one-legged semifinal and a final for a place at the World Cup.

    The priority order for the four World Cup playoff places through the UNL is: Spain, Germany, Portugal, France, England, Norway, Wales, Czechia, Romania, Sweden, North Macedonia, Northern Ireland, Moldova, San Marino.

    Of the 14 teams to win their UNL groups, 10 of those were in Pot 1 or 2 for the World Cup qualifying draw — so on ranking would finish in the top two of their group. If that comes to pass, North Macedonia, Northern Ireland, Moldova and San Marino would get a playoff place. However, that now appears unlikely with Romania and Sweden struggling to finish in the top two.

    Seeding:
    Pot 1: Four World Cup qualifying group runners-up with the best FIFA World Ranking
    Pot 2: As above, teams fifth to eighth in the FIFA World Ranking list order
    Pot 3: As above, teams ninth to 12th in the FIFA World Ranking list order
    Pot 4: UEFA Nations League teams

    Semifinals:
    Pot 1 vs. Pot 4
    Pot 2 vs. Pot 3

    The World Cup Trophy on display in New York during the official Trophy Tour around host cities. Mike Stobe – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images

    Usually, Concacaf would have six automatic places in qualifying — but for the 2026 finals three of the six are taken up by the hosts. That leaves three places to be won, plus two spots in the interconfederation playoff path.

    Concacaf saw 32 nations enter the race to make the finals.

    Round 1: The four lowest-ranked Concacaf nations battled it out in two-legged ties. Anguilla and British Virgin Islands eliminated Turks and Caicos Islands and U.S. Virgin Islands respectively, both on penalties.

    Round 2: The top 28-ranked nations, plus the two winners from Round 1, were drawn into six groups of five teams. Teams played each other only once, rather than home and away. This stage was played in two blocks, in June 2024 and June 2025.

    The six group winners and six group runners-up moved on to Round 3.

    Advanced: Bermuda, Costa Rica, Curaçao, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Nicaragua, Panama, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago

    Round 3: The 12 remaining teams were drawn into three groups of four teams.

    This phase started in September and will be completed in October and November.

    The group winners will qualify for the World Cup, with the two runners-up with the best record going on to take part in the interconfederation playoffs.

    – Check out the fixtures and results | Latest tables

    What can be decided in October?

    Group A: Suriname (4) sit in first place, but it’s a tight group. In October, it’s Suriname vs. Guatemala (1), El Salvador (3) vs. Panama (2); and then Panama vs. Suriname, El Salvador vs Guatemala. The group may look very different heading into November.

    Group B: Jamaica (6) are in control of the group ahead of Curaçao (4). Jamaica will qualify in October if they win in Curaçao and at home to Bermuda (0), and Curaçao fail to beat Trinidad and Tobago (1).

    Group C: Haiti (5) moved top of the group on Thursday with a 3-0 win in Nicaragua (1), while Honduras (5) and Costa Rica (3) played out a goalless draw. It’s still too close to call, and on Monday it’s Honduras vs. Haiti, the top two facing off, and Costa Rica vs. Nicaragua.


    The Socceroos qualified for the World Cup with a 2-1 win over Saudi Arabia on Tuesday. Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images

    This is by some distance the most complicated route to the World Cup, with a layered qualifying process featuring a dual group stage to find the eight automatic qualifiers. But the main part will be done and dusted in June.

    Round 1: The 20 lowest-ranked nations played two-legged ties in October 2023. Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Chinese Taipei, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Singapore and Yemen advanced.

    Round 2: Those 10 winners joined the 26 best-ranked nations. The 36 teams were drawn into nine groups of four teams, with the top two nations going through to Round 3. This stage began in November 2023 and was completed in June 2024.

    – Final tables

    Advanced: Australia, Bahrain, China, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Japan, Jordan, Kuwait, Kyrgyz Republic, North Korea, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan

    Round 3: We were left with 18 nations, drawn into three groups of six teams. Matches began in September 2024 and the round is completed on Tuesday.

    The group winners and runners-up took the first six places at the 2026 World Cup and their campaign is complete.

    Japan became the first team to qualify for the World Cup on March 20, followed by Iran, Jordan, South Korea, Uzbekistan and Australia.

    – Check out the results | Final tables

    Round 4: The six teams in this stage were drawn into two groups of three. They will play each other once, so two matches in total per team, in one host country in October.

    What can be decided in October?

    We will find out the final two automatic qualifiers, plus the teams that will battle it out for a playoff in Round 5. One game from each group will be played on Saturday and Tuesday.

    Group A: Qatar (hosts), United Arab Emirates, Oman

    Wednesday: Oman 0-0 Qatar
    Saturday: United Arab Emirates vs. Oman
    Tuesday: Qatar vs. United Arab Emirates

    Group B: Saudi Arabia (hosts), Iraq, Indonesia

    Wednesday: Indonesia 2-3 Saudi Arabia
    Saturday: Iraq vs. Indonesia
    Tuesday: Saudi Arabia vs. Iraq

    As hosts, Saudi Arabia are favorites to qualify from Group B. Robert Cianflone/Getty Images

    Round 5: A two-legged tie in November 2025 to earn the place in the interconfederation playoffs.


    As in recent qualifying competitions, all 10 nations played each other home and away. The top six nations qualified directly to the finals. The seventh-placed team goes into the interconfederation playoffs in March.

    The first qualifiers took place in September 2023, with the league phase completed in September 2025.

    Miguel Almiron celebrates after Paraguay secured their place in the finals after a 16-year wait. DANIEL DUARTE/AFP via Getty Images

    Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador, Uruguay, Colombia and Paraguay qualified automatically.

    Bolivia are in the interconfederation playoffs.

    – Check out the results | Final table


    All 11 members of the OFC region took part.

    Round 1: The four lowest-ranked nations played a knockout format (two semis and a final) in Samoa in September 2024.

    American Samoa, Cook Islands, Samoa and Tonga were in this round. Samoa beat Tonga 2-1 in the final to advance.

    Round 2: Samoa and the seven top-ranked nations were drawn into two groups of four nations, with matches played in October and November 2024. Games were held in Fiji, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and Vanuatu.

    The top two countries in each group — New Caledonia, Tahiti, New Zealand and Fiji — went on to Round 3.

    – Check out the results here | Final tables

    Round 3: The four remaining countries then played a one-legged knockout format (two semis and a final) in New Zealand in March 2025.

    Semifinals, March 21
    New Caledonia 3-0 Tahiti
    New Zealand 7-0 Fiji

    Final, March 24
    New Caledonia 0-3 New Zealand

    As winners of the final, New Zealand qualified for the World Cup, with losers New Caledonia moving onto the interconfederation playoffs.


    Interconfederation playoffs (2 places)

    The playoffs, to be held in March 2026, will determine the final two qualifiers.

    Six countries will take part. Each of the five confederations (apart from UEFA) will provide one country. The host confederation (so for this edition Concacaf) receives a second slot.

    1 Africa
    1 Asia
    2 Concacaf
    1 Oceania (New Caledonia)
    1 South America (Bolivia)

    The two nations with the best FIFA World Ranking will be seeded and go straight into one of the two finals.

    The four other countries will be drawn to play a semifinal, feeding through to play a seed for one of the two places at the World Cup.

    The playoffs are due to be held in one of the World Cup host nations as a test event.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleBTC Miners Rally in Pre-Market as Sector Nears $90B Market Cap
    Next Article White House’s first reaction as Donald Trump misses out on Nobel Peace Prize: ‘Placing politics over peace’
    IsmailKhan

    Related Posts

    Sports

    Jets’ Kris Boyd in critical condition after being shot in NYC

    November 17, 2025
    Sports

    Follow live: Curry takes on Pelicans after 49-point game

    November 17, 2025
    Sports

    College football Week 12 recap: Breaking down 25 great games

    November 16, 2025
    Top Posts

    How Google Gemini Helps Crypto Traders Filter Signals From Noise

    August 8, 202523 Views

    DeFi Soars with Tokenized Stocks, But User Activity Shifts to NFTs

    August 9, 202520 Views

    DC facing $20 million security funding cut despite Trump complaints of US capital crime

    August 8, 202519 Views
    News Categories
    • Cryptocurrency (790)
    • Financial News (825)
    • Global News (735)
    • Sports (936)
    Most Popular

    No porpoising in 2026, but new F1 rules aren’t “straightforward”

    November 8, 20251 Views

    Jets’ Kris Boyd in critical condition after being shot in NYC

    November 17, 20250 Views

    A16z’s Sees Arcade Tokens As Key To Crypto Evolution

    November 17, 20250 Views
    Our Picks

    Chainlink, UBS Partner with DigiFT for Hong Kong RWA Pilot

    September 11, 2025

    Trump claims he donates significant portion of his salary to White House: ‘I give a lot…’

    October 23, 2025

    Brazilians protest efforts to shield Bolsonaro and lawmakers from courts

    September 22, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    • Home
    • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
    © 2025 21stNews. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Go to mobile version