On 9 May 2017, the
FIFA Council approved the slot allocation for the
2026 FIFA World Cup, which included six direct spots and two
inter-confederation play-off spots for the CONCACAF region. However, in a change of format from previous World Cups, there would be no dedicated host country slot, with the slots of automatically qualifying host countries now taken from the quota of its confederation. If the tournament were to be co-hosted, the FIFA Council would decide which host countries would qualify automatically. On 13 June 2018, three members of CONCACAF—
Canada,
Mexico and the
United States—were selected as hosts for the 2026 World Cup by the
68th FIFA Congress. On 14 February 2023, the FIFA Council awarded automatic berths for all three host countries, leaving three direct slots and two
inter-confederation play-off slots to be decided through CONCACAF qualification. On 28 February, CONCACAF announced the qualifying format for 2026 World Cup qualification. •
First round: Four CONCACAF teams, ranked 29 to 32 based on the
FIFA rankings of December 2023, were divided into two matchups, played on a
two-legged home-and-away basis. The two winners advanced to the second round. •
Second round: Thirty teams, the two winners from the first round and CONCACAF teams ranked 1 to 28 based on the FIFA rankings of December 2023, were drawn into six groups of five teams. They played single
round-robin matches (two home and two away), with group winners and runners-up advancing to the third round. •
Third round: The twelve teams advancing from the second round were drawn into three groups of four teams. They played double round-robin home-and-away matches, with the three group winners qualifying for the World Cup. The two best-ranked runners-up advanced to the
inter-confederation play-offs. ==Entrants==