Who has qualified for the 2026 World Cup?

Austria's David Alaba in action with Romania's Dennis Man during their FIFA World Cup qualifying match on Sunday at the Arena Nationala in Bucharest, Romania. (Inquam Photos via REUTERS)
Short Url
Updated 13 October 2025
Follow

Who has qualified for the 2026 World Cup?

A record 48 teams will play in the 2026 World Cup co-hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada.
On Sunday, Ghana became the fifth African nation to qualify. The 2010 quarterfinalist joins Algeria, Egypt, Morocco and Tunisia at next year’s tournament.
Forty-three teams will get their spots through continental qualifying tournaments. Another two will secure their places in the intercontinental playoffs featuring six teams and scheduled for March 2026. The three host countries automatically qualify.
The breakdown
Asia will have eight direct places and one in the intercontinental playoff.
Africa has nine direct spots plus one for the intercontinental playoff.

North and Central America and the Caribbean get three direct berths (plus the three host nations) and another two spots in the intercontinental playoffs.
South America has six direct spots and will send another team to the intercontinental playoffs.
Oceania for the first time has a guaranteed spot — New Zealand clinched that in March. It could add another with New Caledonia going into the intercontinental playoffs.
Europe will have 16 teams sure to play in the World Cup.
ALREADY QUALIFIED

North America

  • United States, Mexico, Canada (qualified automatically as hosts)

Africa

  • Algeria
  • Egypt
  • Ghana
  • Morocco
  • Tunisia

Asia

  • Australia
  • Iran
  • Japan
  • Jordan
  • South Korea
  • Uzbekistan

Oceania

  • New Zealand

South America

  • Argentina
  • Brazil
  • Colombia
  • Ecuador
  • Paraguay
  • Uruguay

 


West Ham reach FA Cup quarters after Ouattara’s penalty howler

Updated 10 March 2026
Follow

West Ham reach FA Cup quarters after Ouattara’s penalty howler

  • The east London club’s first FA Cup quarter-final for 10 years is welcome respite in a difficult season

LONDON: West Ham moved into the FA Cup quarter-finals with a 5-3 penalty shoot-out against Brentford, who paid the price for Dango Ouattara’s spot-kick blunder on Monday.
Nuno Espirito Santo’s side twice blew the lead as Jarrod Bowen’s double was canceled out by an Igor Thiago brace to force extra-time at the London Stadium.
But in the shoot-out, Brentford winger Ouattara attempted a chipped ‘Panenka’ penalty, but his woeful effort was straight at West Ham keeper Alphonse Areola.
It was a awful mistake by the Burkina Faso international and West Ham made him pay.
Bowen, Valentin Castellanos, Callum Wilson, Tomas Soucek and Konstantinos Mavropanos all converted their spot-kicks, ensuring West Ham will host Leeds in April for a place in the semifinals.
The east London club’s first FA Cup quarter-final for 10 years is welcome respite in a difficult season.
They sit third bottom of the Premier League table, behind Nottingham Forest on goal difference, with nine games to save themselves from crashing into the Championship.
Seventh in the Premier League and in contention for European qualification, Brentford missed the chance to reach the quarter-finals for the first time since 1989.
Haunted by the threat of relegation, Nuno made seven changes to the side that won at Fulham in the league last week as he prioritized their survival bid.
West Ham took the lead in the 19th minute when Mateus Fernandes’ cross to the far post was headed down by Tomas Soucek and Bowen reacted quickest to steer past Brentford keeper Caoimhin Kelleher.
Brentford drew level nine minutes later as Thiago glanced Nathan Collins’ header into the net with his chest, the goal surviving a VAR check for a potential handball and offside.
The Hammers moved back ahead in the 34th minute when Adama Traore was tripped inside the penalty area by Michael Kayode.
Andy Madley didn’t give the spot-kick, but VAR official Constantine Hatzidakis told the referee to consult the pitch-side monitor and he changed his mind after watching the incident again.
Unfazed by the lengthy delay, Bowen sent Kelleher the wrong way from the spot.
Collins’ header was cleared off the line by Ollie Scarles before West Ham’s Axel Disasi missed a golden opportunity, scuffing his chance from close-range after Kelleher denied Soucek.
Kelleher made another fine save from Soucek on the stroke of half-time.
Bowen was unable to complete hat-trick as Kelleher produced yet another good stop from the England forward in the second half.
West Ham’s misses came back to haunt them in the 81st minute when Brentford equalized to force extra-time.
Crysencio Summerville conceded the penalty with a push on Kayode and Thiago stepped up to fire home from the spot.
The Brazilian forward has 21 goals in all competitions in his breakthrough campaign as he pushed for a place in his country’s World Cup squad.
Having used all their substitutes, West Ham finished extra-time with 10 men after Summerville hobbled off in the closing moments.