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)
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Updated 13 October 2025
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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

 


Neymar to undergo knee surgery after helping Santos avoid the drop

Updated 08 December 2025
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Neymar to undergo knee surgery after helping Santos avoid the drop

  • The 33-year-old returned to his childhood club Santos in January after a stint in Saudi Arabia and had a crucial impact in his team’s survival in the Brazilian top flight, scoring five goals in the last four matches
  • He did not provide details on the surgery or a timeline on his expected recovery

SANTOS, SAO PAULO: Neymar will undergo knee surgery after playing through the pain to help Santos avoid relegation with a 3-0 win over Cruzeiro on Sunday, raising more doubts about the winger’s chances of playing at next year’s World Cup.

The 33-year-old returned to his childhood club Santos in January after a stint in Saudi Arabia and had a crucial impact in his team’s survival in the Brazilian top flight, scoring five goals in the last four matches.

“I came for this, to try to help the best way I can. These have been tough weeks for me,” Neymar, who played in only 20 of their 38 league games, told reporters.

“I thank those who were with me to lift me up. If it weren’t for them, I wouldn’t have played these matches because of these injuries, this knee problem. I need to rest and then we will have this knee surgery.”

He did not provide details on the surgery or a timeline on his expected recovery.

Neymar has not featured for Brazil in two years due to a succession of injuries.

In October, national team head coach Carlo Ancelotti said the forward must regain full fitness if he is to earn a recall to the squad for the June 11 to July 19 World Cup in Canada, Mexico and the US.