This guide covers world cup 2026 CONMEBOL qualifiers with the latest verified World Cup 2026 group-stage format, qualified teams, standings logic and knockout qualification rules. It is written as a live reference page for fans who want to follow the table race before and during the tournament.
The 2026 World Cup is the first 48-team edition. The tournament is hosted by Canada, Mexico and the United States, features 104 matches, and runs from 11 June to 19 July 2026. The group stage runs first, then the surviving teams move into a 32-team knockout bracket.
Qualified teams by confederation
FIFA lists all 48 teams as confirmed for the 2026 tournament. The hosts are Canada, Mexico and the United States. The remaining places came through AFC, CAF, Concacaf, CONMEBOL, OFC, UEFA and the FIFA Play-Off Tournament.
| Confederation | Qualified teams |
|---|---|
| Hosts | Canada, Mexico, United States |
| AFC | Australia, Iraq, IR Iran, Japan, Jordan, Korea Republic, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan |
| CAF | Algeria, Cabo Verde, Congo DR, Côte d'Ivoire, Egypt, Ghana, Morocco, Senegal, South Africa, Tunisia |
| Concacaf | Curaçao, Haiti, Panama |
| CONMEBOL | Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Uruguay |
| OFC | New Zealand |
| UEFA | Austria, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Czechia, England, France, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Scotland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Türkiye |
Confederation qualification context
CONMEBOL qualifying used a single South American league table, with every nation playing home and away. The top six qualified directly for the World Cup, and the seventh-place side entered the FIFA Play-Off Tournament route.
World Cup 2026 advancement rules
Every group match awards three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss. The first two teams in each group qualify for the Round of 32. The eight best third-placed teams across the 12 groups also advance, which means third place is still alive in most groups until the final matchday.
Fourth-place teams are eliminated. The round after the group stage is a single-elimination knockout tournament, with extra time and penalties used when required by the competition rules.
Tie-breakers and goal difference
If teams are level on points, FIFA applies tie-breaking criteria. The order starts with results between the teams concerned, including points, goal difference and goals scored in those head-to-head group matches. If that does not settle it, broader group-stage criteria such as overall goal difference, goals scored, team conduct score and FIFA ranking can become relevant.
For the best third-place ranking, points come first, then goal difference, then goals scored, followed by conduct score and ranking if still needed. This makes every late goal important, even in matches that already look decided.