
England will enter the 2026 World Cup as one of the competition favourites with their group stage pathway to be revealed today.
The group stage draw for next summer’s showpiece will be held in Washington DC this afternoon where 48 teams will learn their date.
With the exception of Belgium in 2018, the Three Lions have avoided the heavy-hitters of international football in the group stages in recent years.
With Thomas Tuchel’s side played in Pot 1, they are set to avoid the likes of Spain, France and world champions Argentina.
Given the expanded format, there are some options England fans will be very happy with this afternoon.
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But there is still always the possibility of a dreaded ‘Group of Death’ ready to cast doubt over Tuchel’s grand plans next summer.
England’s dream and worst-case scenarios
It will be 60 years of misery and hurt for England by the time the finals come around, with the Three Lions’ lack of success at World Cups stretching way back to Sir Geoff Hurst’s hat-trick heroics against West Germany in 1966.
But a flawless qualifying campaign undoubtedly makes England one of the most feared teams in the draw, alongside the likes of Spain, France, Brazil and current holders Argentina.
The FA appointed Tuchel with the clear remit to triumph at next year’s tournament and the German’s side will be expected to progress through to the knockout phase, irrespective of the group they find themselves in.
There are a number of tricky scenarios and permutations that Harry Kane and Co could be faced with, though, with star-studded squads, serial winners and potential dark horses scattered throughout the draw.
Metro’s dream and worst-case scenarios for England
Worst-case scenario
England 🏴
Japan 🇯🇵
Norway 🇳🇴
Ghana 🇬🇭
Dream scenario
England 🏴
Austria 🇦🇹
South Africa 🇿🇦
New Caledonia 🇳🇨
England can only be drawn with one other UEFA-qualified nation in their group. Based on FIFA rankings alone, this makes Croatia (ranked 11) the least favourable UEFA opponent for the Three Lions.
However, many of England’s long-suffering fans will be already looking at Pot 3 and, specifically, Norway, with some trepidation given the side’s outstanding showing in Group I.
Stale Solbakken’s side, boasting two genuine Premier League stars in Erling Haaland and Martin Odegaard, won eight from eight in qualifying, scoring 37 and shipping only five goals in the process.
Remarkably, Manchester City’s Haaland racked up 16 goals in his eight appearances in UEFA qualifying – double the tally managed by his closest rivals Memphis Depay, Marko Arnautovic and Kane (all eight).
A quick glance at Pot 4 and there is one nation that jumps out, namely Italy. Gli Azzurri – winners in 1934, 1938, 1982 and 2006 – are forced to qualify via the play-offs, though, having finished second in their group behind Norway.
New Caledonia are the lowest ranked team (150) that could still qualify for the finals, but they must still come through a play-off semi-final and final to make World Cup history.
Should they succeed, the South Pacific nation, with a population roughly the size of Derby, would become the lowest ranked country ever to compete at a World Cup.
How exactly do the World Cup seedings work?
Ahead of today’s eagerly anticipated draw, the 48 competing teams have been split into four pots of 12 nations and each group will have one team drawn from each pot.
Pot 1 contains all three host nations, the United States, Mexico and Canada, plus the nine top countries – those that have qualified – in the FIFA world rankings.
The next-highest ranked teams find themselves in Pots 2, 3 and 4, while the six play-off winners placed into Pot 4.
It’s important to note that no more than two UEFA nations can be placed in the same group. Outside of UEFA, no two teams from the same confederation can be grouped together.
2026 World Cup draw pots
Pot 1 (and FIFA ranking)
United States – (16)
Mexico – (14)
Canada – (28)
Spain – (1)
Argentina – (2)
France – (3)
England – (4)
Portugal – (5)
Brazil – (7)
Netherlands – (6)
Belgium – (8)
Germany – (10)
Pot 2
Croatia – (11)
Morocco – (12)
Colombia – (13)
Uruguay – (15)
Switzerland – (17)
Japan – (19)
Senegal – (18)
Iran – (21)
South Korea – (22)
Ecuador – (23)
Austria – (24)
Australia – (25)
Pot 3
Panama – (31)
Norway – (29)
Egypt – (32)
Algeria – (35)
Scotland – (38)
Paraguay – (39)
Ivory Coast – (42)
Tunisia – (43)
Uzbekistan – (55)
Qatar – (52)
Saudi Arabia – (58)
South Africa – (59)
Pot 4
Jordan – (66)
Cape Verde – (71)
Ghana – (73)
Curacao – (82)
Haiti – (88)
New Zealand – (85)
Uefa PO1 – Italy (9), Denmark (20), Turkey (26), Ukraine (27)
Uefa PO2 – Poland (33), Wales (34), Czech Republic (44), Slovakia (46)
Uefa PO3 – Ireland (62), Albania (61), Bosnia (75), Kosovo (84)
Uefa PO4 Romania (47), Sweden (40), North Macedonia (65), Northern Ireland (69)
Confed PO1 – Iraq (57), DR Congo (60)
Confed PO2 – Bolivia (76), Jamaica (68), New Caledonia (150), Suriname (126)
World Cup schedule
England will learn their opponents today – but official confirmation of fixture dates and venues will follow at a separate ceremony on Saturday.
Before then, here are some key dates for your diary.
Key dates
World Cup draw: December 5
European play-offs: March 26 (semi-finals) and March 31 (finals)
Confederation play-offs: TBC
Group stage
Matchday 1: June 11-17
Matchday 2: June 18-23
Matchday 3: June 24-27
Round of 32: June 28-July 3
Round of 16: July 4-7
Quarter-finals: July 9-11
Semi-finals: July 14-55
Third-place play-off: July 18
Final: July 19
What Tuchel said after England’s final qualifier
England’s squad have a four-month wait before they are reunited again, by which point Tuchel may hope to have a clearer idea of his favoured squad and starting XI.
‘It hurts me honestly, I told the players, I have to say “Merry Christmas” and “Happy New Year” now,’ the England boss said after his side’s 2-0 defeat of Albania to wrap up a perfect qualifying campaign on Sunday.
‘I cannot believe it and in my heart, everything in me wants to be with you guys on Wednesday again on the sidelines and fight and Saturday again and they sucked me into all of this. This is just amazing. It will be very very tough for me to not have a match until March.
‘They have been outstanding. The level of detail cannot always be right. But the commitment to accept mistakes, the commitment after ball losses… to put the head down, to just run; run it off.
‘This has been outstanding through the last camps and I think you can feel it. This is what I talked about and I hope that somehow we make it so that you watch this team and you feel like, ‘Wow. They really mean it!”‘
He added: ‘It is a privilege to work with these players because I love their character and their attitude and how they are shaped so this I knew and today I could say everything played out perfectly because from the first camp, I could feel the energy.
‘Then we had a little dip in summer but then the way we reacted and built from there in the three camps was just outstanding so it is a privilege every day so full credit to the players for their commitment and it makes me of course very happy and very proud.’
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