
The World Cup line-up is complete - here's what you need to know
The final six nations have qualified for the 2026 World Cup, completing the expanded 48‑team line‑up for this summer's tournament.
DR Congo and Iraq were the last two teams to book their places in the 23rd edition of the World Cup to be held in the United States, Canada and Mexico from 11 June to 19 July.
It rounded off a marathon qualification process that began in September 2023 and spanned six confederations before culminating in the high‑stakes Uefa and intercontinental play‑offs on 31 March.
The final four European teams were confirmed on Tuesday, with the big news being that four-time winners Italy were knocked out by Bosnia-Herzegovina. The Czech Republic, Turkey and Sweden also qualified.
DR Congo and Iraq booked their place with wins over Jamaica and Bolivia respectively.
Of the 48 teams participating, the three hosts qualified automatically while 43 places were earned via direct qualification from the confederations and two spots were determined by intercontinental play-offs.
With the full cast confirmed, attention now shifts towards the biggest World Cup staged.
When will the games be played?
With games taking place across four time zones and at locations up to 2,800 miles apart, there will be a total of 13 different kick-off times.
That means for viewers in Europe, some games will be played from midnight onwards.
For example, all five of the group-stage matches in Kansas City will take place in the middle of the night UK time, with the earliest kick-off being 00:00 BST on Friday, 26 June for Tunisia against the Netherlands while the latest is a 03:00 BST start for Algeria versus Austria on Sunday, 28 June.
The San Francisco Bay Area hosts two games that will kick off at 05:00 BST - Austria versus Jordan on Tuesday, 16 June and Turkey versus Paraguay on Friday, 19 June.
There are also 05:00 BST games in Vancouver - Australia versus Turkey on Saturday, 13 June - and in Guadalupe, Mexico, when Tunisia take on Japan on Saturday, 20 June.
In total there will be 35 group-stage games that kick-off between 00:00 BST and 05:00 BST, which is almost half of the 72 fixtures for that stage.
However, the most common kick-off time is 20:00 BST, with 12 group-stage games taking place then.
