As of May 6, 2026, the European picture for the 2026 FIFA World Cup is complete. UEFA had 16 places in the expanded 48-team tournament, and all 16 are now confirmed.

The quickest useful answer is this: 12 teams qualified by winning their groups, and four more came through the March 2026 play-offs. The final four European teams to book their places were Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czechia, Sweden and Turkiye.

At a glance

UEFA berths

16 teams

Direct qualifiers

12 group winners

Play-off winners

Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czechia, Sweden, Turkiye

Play-off dates

March 26 and March 31, 2026

Biggest miss

Italy lost to Bosnia and Herzegovina on penalties

Quick answers

How many European teams qualified for World Cup 2026?

UEFA has 16 teams in the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

Which European teams qualified through the play-offs?

The four play-off winners were Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czechia, Sweden and Turkiye.

Did Italy qualify for World Cup 2026?

No. Italy lost to Bosnia and Herzegovina on penalties in the play-off final on March 31, 2026.

When did the UEFA World Cup play-offs take place?

The European play-off semi-finals were played on March 26, 2026, and the finals were played on March 31, 2026.

How many teams qualified directly from UEFA groups?

Twelve teams qualified directly by winning their UEFA qualifying groups.

When does World Cup 2026 start?

The tournament runs from June 11, 2026 to July 19, 2026 in Canada, Mexico and the United States.

Which European teams qualified for World Cup 2026?

According to UEFA and FIFA, the 16 European qualifiers are Austria, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Czechia, England, France, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Scotland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and Turkiye.

Which European teams qualified for World Cup 2026?

UEFA's 16 confirmed teams for the 2026 FIFA World Cup

TeamRoute to qualification
AustriaGroup winner
BelgiumGroup winner
Bosnia and HerzegovinaPlay-off winner
CroatiaGroup winner
CzechiaPlay-off winner
EnglandGroup winner
FranceGroup winner
GermanyGroup winner
NetherlandsGroup winner
NorwayGroup winner
PortugalGroup winner
ScotlandGroup winner
SpainGroup winner
SwedenPlay-off winner
SwitzerlandGroup winner
TurkiyePlay-off winner

UEFA's final four places were decided by the March 2026 play-offs.

That leaves UEFA with a familiar mix of established powers and a few less predictable names. England, France, Germany, Spain, Portugal and the Netherlands are all there. So are Bosnia and Herzegovina, Sweden, Czechia and Turkiye, who had to come through the extra March route.

How many UEFA teams reached the 2026 World Cup?

UEFA's format was straightforward. Twelve group winners qualified directly, 12 group runners-up moved into the play-offs, four UEFA Nations League teams joined them there, and four play-off winners took the final European places.

That is how Europe got from the main qualifying groups to its full 16-team World Cup contingent.

How the UEFA World Cup play-offs ended

The play-offs produced the last four European qualifiers.

Bosnia and Herzegovina survived two knockout ties and then beat Italy on penalties in the final.

Sweden came through a high-scoring path and edged Poland 3-2 in their final.

Turkiye won both of their matches by one goal.

Czechia needed penalties in both rounds.

How the UEFA play-offs ended

Play-off finals on March 31, 2026

PathResultQualified team
ABosnia and Herzegovina 1-1 Italy, Bosnia and Herzegovina won 4-1 on penaltiesBosnia and Herzegovina
BSweden 3-2 PolandSweden
CKosovo 0-1 TurkiyeTurkiye
DCzechia 2-2 Denmark, Czechia won 3-1 on penaltiesCzechia

Play-off semi-finals on March 26, 2026

MatchResult
Italy vs Northern IrelandItaly 2-0 Northern Ireland
Wales vs Bosnia and HerzegovinaWales 1-1 Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina won 4-2 on penalties
Ukraine vs SwedenUkraine 1-3 Sweden
Poland vs AlbaniaPoland 2-1 Albania
Turkiye vs RomaniaTurkiye 1-0 Romania
Slovakia vs KosovoSlovakia 3-4 Kosovo
Denmark vs North MacedoniaDenmark 4-0 North Macedonia
Czechia vs Republic of IrelandCzechia 2-2 Republic of Ireland, Czechia won 4-3 on penalties

Bosnia and Herzegovina and Czechia both survived penalty shoot-outs in the final round.

Which big European teams missed out?

The biggest headline miss is Italy. Italy got through their semi-final against Northern Ireland, took the lead in the final against Bosnia and Herzegovina, and still ended up out after a penalty shoot-out.

There were other notable exits too. Denmark reached the play-off final but lost to Czechia on penalties, and Poland reached the play-off final but lost 3-2 to Sweden.

Ukraine were beaten 3-1 by Sweden in the semi-finals, while Wales lost to Bosnia and Herzegovina on penalties in the same round.

For the wider 48-team field after Europe was settled, the full World Cup 2026 teams page is the cleanest companion read.

What this means for the final 48-team field

Europe sends a deep group again. The direct qualifiers gave UEFA its usual heavyweight core, and the play-offs added four teams that came through pressure matches rather than long, comfortable group finishes.

Bottom line

The UEFA World Cup qualifiers are finished, and Europe's 16 teams for World Cup 2026 are now set.

The 12 direct qualifiers were Austria, Belgium, Croatia, England, France, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Scotland, Spain and Switzerland.

The four play-off winners were Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czechia, Sweden and Turkiye.

If readers mainly want the biggest surprise, it is Italy missing out again after losing to Bosnia and Herzegovina on penalties on March 31, 2026.

What to read after this page

If you want the next layer of context, move from Europe's final list to the full World Cup 2026 teams page, then to the official squads page as rosters settle, and finally to the schedule page when you want to turn qualification into match planning.

Coverage trust

Coverage trust and verification

This story is checked against official tournament and federation material, then updated as the public record changes.

Updated: May 06, 2026News EditorOfficial updates and schedule explainers32 published articles4 official sources

About the author

Daniel Wu

Daniel Wu edits the briefing desk and focuses on turning official updates, scheduling changes, and tournament structure into fast, readable explainers.

News EditorOfficial updates and schedule explainers32 published articles

Coverage focus: Leads the briefing desk, translating official tournament updates, schedule changes, and format notes into fast explainers for readers following the event day to day.

How this reporting is checked: Checks FIFA announcements, federation statements, and schedule releases before publishing deadline-sensitive tournament updates.

Official sources

Official FIFA references

If you are comparing Europe's route with the wider tournament picture, keep the global final results explainer, the full teams page and the teams-missed explainer open together.