Qualification FIFA's confederations organised their qualifications through
continental championships, with the exception of
UEFA which organised its own
qualifying competition. Australia and New Zealand, as co-hosts, qualified automatically for the tournament, leaving the remaining 207
FIFA member associations eligible to enter qualification if they chose to do so. Australia competed at the
2022 AFC Women's Asian Cup, whilst New Zealand did not enter the
OFC Women's Nations Cup the same year. The reigning
Women's World Cup champions United States competed in qualification through the
CONCACAF W Championship. The
Chadian and
Pakistani football associations were suspended by FIFA, thus excluding them from entering qualifications.
Rwanda,
Sudan,
DR Congo and
São Tomé and Príncipe entered qualification but withdrew later.
Kenya withdrew before the second round of qualifiers.
North Korea and
Turkmenistan withdrew from the
Women's Asian Cup qualifiers due to safety concerns and travel restrictions related to the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Iraq withdrew after the AFC draw. Due to the uncertainty of women's sport after the
Taliban takeover of the country,
Afghanistan withdrew from qualification. Due to
COVID-19 pandemic outbreaks in their squads, Women's Asian Cup hosts
India withdrew from qualification.
American Samoa withdrew due to continuing difficulties related to the pandemic.
Russia were disqualified from competing due to the
Russian invasion of Ukraine. The allocation of slots for each confederation was confirmed by the FIFA Council on 25 December 2020. The slots for the two host nations were taken directly from the quotas allocated to their confederations. •
AFC (Asia): 6 slots (including co-hosts
Australia) •
CAF (Africa): 4 slots •
CONCACAF (North America, Central America and the Caribbean): 4 slots •
CONMEBOL (South America): 3 slots •
OFC (Oceania): 1 slot (including co-hosts
New Zealand) •
UEFA (Europe): 11 slots •
Inter-confederation play-off tournament: 3 slots A ten-team
play-off tournament decided the final three spots at the Women's World Cup. The play-off slot allocation was as follows: • AFC (Asia): 2 slots • CAF (Africa): 2 slots • CONCACAF (North America, Central America and the Caribbean): 2 slots • CONMEBOL (South America): 2 slots • OFC (Oceania): 1 slot • UEFA (Europe): 1 slot Of the 32 nations qualified for the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup, 20 countries competed at the previous tournament in 2019.
Haiti,
Morocco,
Panama, the
Philippines,
Portugal, the
Republic of Ireland,
Vietnam and
Zambia made their debuts at the FIFA Women's World Cup. This World Cup was the first
FIFA tournament the Philippines played in. This was Panama, Portugal and Vietnam's first FIFA women's competition, having only taken part in various FIFA men's tournaments. Zambia made history as the first landlocked country in Africa to qualify for a World Cup for either sex. Morocco became the first-ever Arab country to qualify for the Women's World Cup, while the Republic of Ireland marked their debut at any senior women's tournament.
Denmark made their first appearance in 16 years after missing three consecutive tournaments, their last appearance being in
2007.
Costa Rica,
Colombia and
Switzerland returned to the tournament after missing the previous one in
2019.
Italy qualified for two consecutive women's World Cups for the first time in their history, after three sporadic appearances in 1991, 1999 and 2019.
Thailand,
Cameroon,
Chile, and
Scotland, all of whom qualified for the 2019 Women's World Cup, did not qualify for the 2023 tournament.
Iceland was the highest ranked team in the
FIFA Women's World Rankings that failed to qualify, ranked 16th at the time.
Zambia were the lowest ranked team to qualify, ranked 81st at the time. The qualified teams, listed by region, with numbers in parentheses indicating final positions in the
FIFA Women's World Ranking before the tournament were:
AFC (6) • (10) (co-hosts) • (14) • (11) • (46) • (17) • (32)
CAF (4) • (72) • (40) • (54) • (77)
CONCACAF (6) • (7) • (36) • (53) • (43) • (52) • (1)
CONMEBOL (3) • (28) • (8) • (25)
OFC (1) • (26) (co-hosts)
UEFA (12) • (13) • (4) • (5) • (2) • (16) • (9) • (12) • (21) • (22) • (6) • (3) • (20)
Squads Each team had to provide to FIFA a preliminary squad of between 35 and 55 players, which FIFA did not publish. From the preliminary squad, each team had to name a final squad of 23 players (three of whom must be goalkeepers) by 9 July 2023. Players in the final squad could be replaced by a player from the preliminary squad due to serious injury or illness up to 24 hours prior to kickoff of the team's first match.
Draw The final draw took place at the
Aotea Centre in
Auckland, New Zealand, on 22 October 2022 at 19:30
NZDT (
UTC+13), prior to the completion of
qualification. The three winners of the
inter-confederation play-off were not known at the time of the draw. Retired American international and two-time Women's World Cup winner
Carli Lloyd and
CNN International sports presenter
Amanda Davies conducted the draw. Each confederation had a retired international representing them as a draw assistant:
Maia Jackman of New Zealand for the OFC and
Julie Dolan of Australia for the AFC, alongside men's internationals
Ian Wright of England for UEFA,
Alexi Lalas of the United States for CONCACAF,
Geremi of Cameroon for the CAF and
2002 World Cup winner
Gilberto Silva of Brazil for CONMEBOL. Snowboarding Olympic gold medalist
Zoi Sadowski-Synnott of New Zealand and four-time swimming Olympic gold medalist
Cate Campbell of Australia also assisted the draw. For the draw, the 32 teams were allocated into four pots based on the
FIFA Women's World Rankings of 13 October 2022. Pot one contained both co-hosts New Zealand and Australia (both automatically placed in positions A1 and B1, respectively) along with the best six teams. Pot two contained the next best eight teams, with the next best eight teams being allocated into the following pot (pot three). Pot four contained the lowest ranked teams, along with the placeholders for the three inter-confederation play-off winners. With the exception of UEFA, teams from the same confederation could not be drawn in the same group. However, since each inter-confederation play-off group contained multiple confederations, the placeholders were identified by the seeded teams in their respective play-off pathways to avoid any draw constraints. The draw started with pot one and ended with pot four, with the team selected being allocated to the first available group alphabetically. Pot 1 teams were automatically drawn to position 1 of each group, with the following positions drawn for the remaining pots. The pots for the draws are shown below.
Draw result ;Notes
(H): Hosts ==Officiating==