Africa’s contingent for the 2026 FIFA World Cup is now officially complete, with nine nations sealing automatic spots at football’s grandest stage following the close of the CAF qualification series.
The teams flying the continent’s flag in next year’s tournament across Canada, Mexico, and the United States are:
Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt, Algeria, Senegal, Ivory Coast, Ghana, South Africa, and Cape Verde.
The qualifiers delivered a captivating mix of the expected and the extraordinary. Cape Verde etched their name into football history, becoming the smallest African nation ever, and only the second-smallest country after Iceland in 2018, to qualify for the World Cup.
Meanwhile, Ivory Coast and South Africa make long-awaited returns to the global scene, joining familiar forces such as Senegal, Morocco, and Tunisia, who continue to uphold Africa’s competitive pedigree on the world stage.
The reigning African champions, Ivory Coast, and fellow North African giants Tunisia completed their campaigns with remarkable defensive records, neither side conceded a single goal, demonstrating both tactical discipline and defensive grit throughout the qualification marathon.
‘It won’t be easy’: Emmanuel Okoduwa expects Nigeria to reach World Cup
Under the revamped qualification format, only the nine group winners booked direct tickets to North America. The drama isn’t entirely over, however; Nigeria, Cameroon, DR Congo, and Gabon, who finished as the four best runners-up, will meet in Morocco this November for a decisive CAF playoff tournament. The winner will proceed to the inter-confederation playoffs, with a chance to claim Africa’s potential tenth spot at the expanded 48-team World Cup.
With a record number of African nations set to participate, the 2026 edition offers the continent its broadest platform yet to challenge global dominance and perhaps rewrite its football story on the biggest stage of all.