The fixtures for the 2026 Six Nations were announced on 19 May 2025, beginning with the Six Nations' first ever Thursday night game between
France and
Ireland. It also featured the first ever Friday night game in Dublin as Ireland hosted
Wales in the fourth round of matches. • The game took place on a
Thursday night in order to avoid a clash with the
2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony. ----
Notes: • Italy reclaimed the
Cuttitta Cup, having lost it in the previous year's tournament. •
Ignacio Brex,
Paolo Garbisi and
Michele Lamaro (all Italy) earned their 50th test caps. • This was Italy's first opening win of a Six Nations campaign since defeating
France 23–18 in
2013. ----
Notes: •
Immanuel Feyi-Waboso was initially selected on the right wing for England, but had to withdraw through injury, with
Tom Roebuck taking his place in the starting XV.
Round 2 Notes: •
Edwin Edogbo (Ireland) made his international debut. •
Hollie Davidson became the first woman to referee a men's Six Nations match. ----
Notes: • Scotland reclaimed the
Calcutta Cup. ----
Notes: •
Fabien Brau-Boirie and
Noah Nene (both France) made their international debuts. •
Julien Marchand and
Charles Ollivon (both France) earned their 50th test caps. • This was the most points scored by France over Wales, surpassing the 51 points scored in 1998. • The 57,744 attendance was the lowest ever for a Six Nations match in Cardiff.
Round 3 Notes: •
Jack Conan (Ireland) was originally named among the replacements but was ruled out due to illness; he was replaced on the bench by
Cian Prendergast. •
Maro Itoje became the ninth player to earn 100 test caps for England. • Ireland's 42 points was the most they had scored in an away match against England; the 21-point winning margin was also Ireland's biggest in an away match against England. • Scotland retained the
Doddie Weir Cup. ----
Notes: •
Matthieu Jalibert (France) was originally named to start at fly-half but was ruled out the day before the match; he was replaced by
Thomas Ramos at fly-half, who was replaced by
Théo Attissogbe at fullback, who was replaced by debutant
Gaël Dréan on the right wing. •
Gaël Dréan (France) made his international debut. •
Thomas Ramos (France) earned his 50th test cap. • France retained the
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy.
Round 4 Notes: •
Jamison Gibson-Park (Ireland) earned his 50th test cap. •
Nathan Doak (Ireland) and
Louie Hennessey (Wales) both made their international debut. ----
Notes: • Scotland reclaimed the
Auld Alliance Trophy, having lost the previous four editions. • Scotland's total of 50 points was their highest recorded against France. • The combined score of 90 was the highest combined
between the two teams. •
Baptiste Serin (France) earned his 50th test cap. • France scored the most points in a loss in the Six Nations, breaking their own record from
2015, scoring 35 points in a 55–35 loss to
England. ----
Notes: • Tom Curry (England) was injured in the warm-up and replaced in the starting line-up by Sam Underhill, whose place on the bench was taken by
Chandler Cunningham-South. •
Ben Earl (England) earned his 50th test cap. • This was Italy's first-ever win over England after 32 consecutive defeats.
Round 5 Notes: • Ireland retained both the
Triple Crown and
Centenary Quaich. • This was Ireland's equal-biggest home win over Scotland, equalling
their win in 2014. ----
Notes: • Wales recorded their first Six Nations win in 16 matches, last winning
against Italy in 2023, and their first home win in the Championship since winning
against Scotland in 2022. ---- • This game was both the highest away score for England against France, and the highest home score for France against England. It was also the highest aggregate score (94 points) in
113 games between the teams. • England scored the most points in a loss in the Six Nations, surpassing France's 40 points in the previous round. •
Marcus Smith and
Sam Underhill (both England) earned their 50th test caps. •
Louis Bielle-Biarrey became the second player in the Six Nations era to score four tries in one match, equalling
Chris Ashton for
England against Italy in 2011. •
Louis Bielle-Biarrey broke the record for
most tries in a single Championship (9 tries). • With this result, England finished in fifth place, their worst position since the Championship became the Six Nations in 2000. It was also the first time since
1987 that England had only secured one win in any of the Championship incarnations. ==Player statistics==