The FIFA World Cup 2026 draw assigns 48 qualified teams into 12 groups of four, using a four-pot system based on FIFA rankings to ensure balanced matchups.
Hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico,
the event expands from 32 teams, with the draw scheduled for friday (December 5, 2025) in Washington, D.C., lasting about 45 minutes within a 90-minute ceremony.
FIFA World Cup 2026 Pot Structure and Seeding
Teams divide into four pots of 12, drawn sequentially to fill Groups A through L, with one team per pot per group. Pot 1 includes hosts USA (Group D), Mexico (Group A), Canada (Group B), plus the top nine ranked teams like Spain, Argentina, France, and England; Pots 2-3 follow rankings, while Pot 4 holds the lowest-ranked and six intercontinental playoff winners as placeholders.
FIFA WC 2026 Pots
Pot 1: Mexico, USA, Canada, Spain, Argentina, France, England, Brazil, Portugal, Netherlands, Belgium, Germany
Pot 2: Croatia, Morocco, Colombia, Uruguay, Australia, Switzerland, Japan, Senegal, Iran, Korea Republic, Ecuador, Austria
Pot 3: Norway, Panama, Egypt, Algeria, South Africa, Scotland, Paraguay, Tunisia, Saudi Arabia, Côte d'Ivoire, Uzbekistan, Qatar
Pot 4: Jordan, Cape Verde, Ghana, CuraÇao, Haiti, New Zealand, European Playoff A, B, C and D, Intercontinental Playoff 1 and 2
FIFA World Cup 2026 Key Draw Rules and Restrictions
Hosts are pre-assigned to Groups A, B, and D as USA, Mexico and Canada have already found their places before the draw.
The draw balances randomness with rules to prevent unbalanced groups, primarily limiting teams from the same confederation in one group. UEFA's 16 teams allow up to two per group, while other confederations cap at one. Hosts Mexico, Canada, and USA start pre-assigned to Groups A, B, and D.
Confederation Limits
UEFA (Europe): Maximum two teams per group due to 16 slots.
CONMEBOL (South America), AFC (Asia), CAF (Africa), CONCACAF (North/Central America, excluding hosts): One team per group.
OFC (Oceania): No restrictions beyond pot placement.
These ensure geographic diversity and competitive equity across the 12 groups.
New Top Seeds Rule
FIFA introduced a rule splitting top seeds Spain and Argentina, plus France and England, into separate tournament pathways. This prevents earlier clashes, like Spain facing Argentina before the final if both top their groups. The bracket divides into sections, maintaining draw randomness within constraints.











