AFRICA · WORLD CUP
Key Facts
—A record turnout: Ten African nations are at the 2026 World Cup, the most ever, at the first 48-team finals hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico.
—The nine direct qualifiers: South Africa, Algeria, Cabo Verde, Côte d’Ivoire, Egypt, Ghana, Morocco, Senegal and Tunisia all booked automatic places.
—The tenth: DR Congo completed the contingent via the play-offs, beating Jamaica 1-0 on 31 March 2026, its first finals since playing as Zaire in 1974.
—A fairytale debut: Cabo Verde, home to about half a million people, reached its first World Cup and earned a historic point with a 0-0 draw against Spain on 15 June.
—Morocco leads the charge: The 2022 semi-finalists and 2030 co-hosts opened with a 1-0 win over Scotland on 19 June.
—A glaring absence: Three-time African champions Nigeria failed to qualify for the finals.
A record 10 African teams are at the 2026 World Cup, more than ever before, as the continent arrives at the first 48-nation finals with a genuine debutant, a semi-finalist eyeing 2030, and one painful absence.
A record number of African teams at the 2026 World Cup
The expanded 48-team tournament has widened the door, and Africa has walked through it in force. The continent now has its largest-ever presence at a single finals.
Nine nations qualified directly: South Africa, Algeria, Cabo Verde, Côte d’Ivoire, Egypt, Ghana, Morocco, Senegal and Tunisia.
DR Congo made it ten, edging Jamaica 1-0 in the intercontinental play-offs on 31 March 2026 to reach the finals for the first time since it played as Zaire in 1974.
Africa held nine direct berths for the first time under the expanded format, up from five places at the 2022 finals in Qatar.
Cabo Verde’s fairytale
No story captures the moment better than Cabo Verde. The Atlantic archipelago, home to about half a million people, is among the smallest nations ever to reach a World Cup.
The Blue Sharks sealed their debut with a 3-0 win over Eswatini on the final qualifying day. They are one of four newcomers at the tournament, alongside Jordan, Curaçao and Uzbekistan.
They then made history on 15 June, holding Spain to a 0-0 draw to claim the first World Cup point in the country’s history.
Cabo Verde scored just 16 goals across its 10 qualifiers, the work of a tightly organised side built largely on its global diaspora.
Morocco and the road to 2030
Morocco arrives with the continent’s highest expectations. In 2022 it became the first African and Arab nation to reach a World Cup semi-final, and it opened this campaign with a 1-0 win over Scotland on 19 June.
The stakes stretch beyond the pitch. Morocco will co-host the 2030 World Cup with Spain and Portugal, and is building the 115,000-seat Grand Stade Hassan II near Casablanca for the occasion.
A deep run in 2026 would burnish that platform, turning sporting success into the kind of soft power and investment pull few African nations command.
The heavyweights, and a notable absence
Senegal, ranked among Africa’s strongest sides, opened with a 3-1 defeat to France on 16 June but remains dangerous in a group that also features Norway and Iraq.
Egypt, Ghana, Algeria, Tunisia, Côte d’Ivoire and South Africa round out a contingent rich in pedigree and continental titles.
Egypt, a record seven-time African champion, and Ghana, a four-time continental winner, carry some of the deepest histories in the field.
The most striking name is the one missing. Nigeria, three-time African champions and one of the continent’s great football brands, failed to qualify, a reminder of how unforgiving the road has become.
Where Africa meets Latin America
The draw has woven Africa and the Americas together. South Africa featured in the tournament’s opening match against host Mexico, while DR Congo shares its group with Colombia and Portugal.
Those crossings echo a deeper South-South story, as emerging regions trade not only goods and capital but also sporting prestige on the same stage.
For readers across Latin America, several of these African sides will be familiar names before the group stage is over.
Why it matters beyond football
For an internationally minded audience, the World Cup is also a barometer of Africa’s global presence. A record delegation means more visibility, more diaspora pride and more commercial attention.
Football remains one of the continent’s most powerful exports, from stars in Europe’s top leagues to the broadcast and sponsorship value of nations such as Morocco and Senegal.
Sponsors, broadcasters and tournament organisers increasingly court African audiences and talent, and a record presence on the field strengthens that hand.
Whether or not any side matches Morocco’s 2022 run, Africa’s largest-ever turnout signals a continent moving toward the centre of the world’s biggest sporting stage.
Frequently asked questions
How many African teams are at the 2026 World Cup?
A record 10 African nations qualified for the 2026 World Cup, the most in the tournament’s history.
Which African teams qualified for the 2026 World Cup?
South Africa, Algeria, Cabo Verde, Côte d’Ivoire, Egypt, Ghana, Morocco, Senegal and Tunisia qualified directly, with DR Congo completing the group through the intercontinental play-offs.
Is Cabo Verde really at its first World Cup?
Yes. Cabo Verde, a nation of about half a million people, reached its first World Cup and earned a point with a 0-0 draw against Spain on 15 June 2026.
Did Nigeria qualify for the 2026 World Cup?
No. Nigeria, a three-time African champion, failed to qualify for the 2026 finals.
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