With England completing their latest Nations League campaign back in November – sealing promotion back to League A in the process – their next game will see them get their World Cup journey underway under the guidance of new boss Thomas Tuchel.
Thoughts will now turn to the qualifiers for the 2026 tournament, which are set to begin in March 2025. It is now less than 18 months before the next edition of the quadrennial tournament, yet some confederations are already midway through their qualification process.
Following December’s qualifying phase draw, teams can start to navigate a path to attending North American World Cup since 1994.
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UEFA World Cup qualifying draw info
Teams have been drawn into 12 groups of four or five teams, playing each other home and away. Teams drawn in one of the four five-team groups will start qualifying in March, while teams drawn in one of the six four-team groups will start their campaigns in September. All groups conclude in November 2025.
England have been drawn into Group K, with Thomas Tuchel’s first assignments as England boss being home clashes against Albania and Latvia.
The 12 group winners will secure a place at the 2026 World Cup, with the four remaining UEFA spots claimed by the winners of the play-offs involving the 12 runners-up.
UEFA World Cup qualifying groups (A-F)
Group A
Group B
Group C
Group D
Group E
Group F
Germany or Italy
Switzerland
Portugal or Denmark
France or Croatia
Spain or Netherlands
Portugal or Denmark
Slovakia
Sweden
Greece
Ukraine
Turkey
Hungary
Northern Ireland
Slovenia
Scotland
Iceland
Georgia
Republic of Ireland
Luxembourg
Kosovo
Belarus
Azerbaijan
Bulgaria
Armenia
UEFA World Cup qualifying groups (G-L)
Group G
Group H
Group I
Group J
Group K
Group L
Spain or Netherlands
Austria
Germany or Italy
Belgium
England
France or Croatia
Poland
Romania
Norway
Wales
Serbia
Czech Republic
Finland
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Israel
North Macedonia
Albania
Montenegro
Lithuania
Cyprus
Estonia
Kazakhstan
Latvia
Faroe Islands
Malta
San Marino
Moldova
Liechtenstein
Andorra
Gibraltar
UEFA World Cup qualifying play-offs
The runners-up from each of the 12 qualifying groups will secure a spot in the play-offs, along with the four best-ranked group winners of the 2024/25 Nations League that did not finish either first or second in their qualifying group.
These 16 teams will be drawn into four play-off paths, with four teams in each route. The semi-finals will be played over a single leg, followed by a single-leg final during the same international window in March 2026, just months before the start of the World Cup.
UEFA World Cup qualifying fixture dates
The group stages of the qualifiers will run between March and November 2025. The play-off fixtures will take place between 26th and 31st March 2026. As for the tournament itself, it will begin on 11th June, with the final taking place on 19th July 2026.
Thomas Tuchel’s confirmed England fixture list
Date
Opposition
H/A
Competition
Free 21st Mar
Albania
H
World Cup qualifier
Mon 24th Mar
Latvia
H
World Cup qualifier
Sat 7th Jun
Andorra
A
World Cup qualifier
Tue 10th Jun
Senegal
H
Friendly
Sat 6th Sep
Andorra
H
World Cup qualifier
Tue 9th Sep
Serbia
A
World Cup qualifier
You 9th oct
Wales
H
Friendly
Tue 14th Oct
Latvia
A
World Cup qualifier
Thu 13th Nov
Serbia
H
World Cup qualifier
Sun 16th Nov
Albania
A
World Cup qualifier
World Cup 2026 format
After seven successive tournaments with 32 participants, from 2026 onwards, there will be a total of 48 countries battling it out to take home the World Cup trophy.
This means each confederation gets more places at the final tournament. UEFA now gets 16 spots, CAF now gets nine spots (up from five) and AFC nations get eight spots rather than the 4.5 they enjoyed previously.
Elsewhere, CONCACAF teams will have six spots, with three going to the hosts USA, Canada and Mexico. CONMEBOL now has six spots, (up from 4.5), while OFC now has a guaranteed spot, rather than the 0.5 they previously had on offer.
With an expanded competition comes a slight change in format. 48 teams will be split into 12 groups of four teams.
The top two in each group will qualify for the knockout stages, as well as the eight best third-placed teams, thus creating a round of 32.
From then on, there will be a straight knockout tournament to see who will be crowned the winner at the MetLife Stadium, which is situated just west of New York City.
The full list of venues and their capacity can be found in the table below, with the tournament returning to North America for the first time since 1994.
Host venues for the 2026 World Cup
Stadium
Capacity
MetLife Stadium, New York
82,500
AT&T Stadium, Dallas
80,000
GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City
76,416
NRG Stadium, Houston
72,220
Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta
71,000
SoFi Stadium, Los Angeles
70,240
Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia
69,796
Lumen Field, Seattle
69,000
Levi’s Stadium, San Francisco
68,500
Gillette Stadium, Boston
65,878
Hard Rock Stadium, Miami
64,767
BC Place, Vancouver
54,500
BMO Field, Toronto
45,000
Azteca Stadium, Mexico City
87,523
BBVA Stadium, Monterrey
53,500
Via Sports Illustrated
The 1994 World Cup in the United States was the final World Cup that featured 24 teams, while the next one in the US will be the debut of a 48-team competition.
Before all that, however, the UEFA qualifiers will see who from Europe will make it across the pond in 18 months.
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