The qualifying draw took place at the
Palais des Congrès Acropolis in
Nice, on 23 February 2014, In March 2012,
Gianni Infantino, the UEFA general secretary at the time, stated that UEFA would review the qualification competition to ensure that it was not "boring". In May 2013, Platini confirmed a similar qualifying format would be again discussed during the September 2013 UEFA executive committee meeting in
Dubrovnik.
Qualified teams Thirteen of the sixteen teams (including hosts France) that qualified for
Euro 2012 qualified again for the 2016 final tournament. Among them were
England, who became only the sixth team to record a flawless qualifying campaign (10 wins in 10 matches), defending European champions
Spain, and world champions
Germany, who qualified for their 12th straight European Championship finals.
Romania,
Turkey,
Austria, and
Switzerland all returned after missing out in 2012, with the Austrians qualifying for just their second final Euro tournament, after having co-hosted
Euro 2008 and first time through qualifying. Four teams secured their first qualification to a UEFA European Championship final tournament:
Albania,
Iceland,
Northern Ireland, and
Wales. Northern Ireland and Wales had each previously competed in the
FIFA World Cup, while Albania and Iceland had never participated in a major tournament.
Slovakia meanwhile are making the first tournament as an independent nation, having qualified for three Euro tournaments and eight World Cups under
Czechoslovakia. Similarly, both
Austria and
Ukraine completed successful qualification campaigns for the first time, having only previously qualified as hosts (of
2008 and
2012 respectively).
Scotland were the only team from the
British Isles not to qualify for the finals, and it also marked the first time that both Northern Ireland and the
Republic of Ireland qualified for the same major tournament finals.
Greece, champions in 2004, finished bottom in their group and failed to qualify for the first time since 2000. Two other previous champions, the
Netherlands (1988) and
Denmark (1992), missed out on the finals. The Dutch team failed to qualify for the first time since
Euro 1984 (also held in France), missing out on their first major tournament since the
2002 FIFA World Cup and only 16 months after having finished third at the
2014 FIFA World Cup. Denmark did not appear at the Euro finals for the first time
since 2008, after losing in the play-off round against
Sweden. As of 2024, this was the last time that Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland qualified for either the World Cup or European Championship finals, the only time that Iceland qualified, as well as the last time that Denmark, the Netherlands and Scotland failed to qualify.
Final draw The draw for the finals took place at the
Palais des Congrès de la Porte Maillot in
Paris on 12 December 2015, 18:00
CET. The 24 qualified teams were drawn into six groups of four teams, with the hosts France being automatically placed in position A1. The remaining teams were seeded into four pots of five (Pot 1) or six teams (Pots 2, 3, and 4). As the title holders, Spain were seeded in Pot 1, while the other 22 teams were seeded according to the
UEFA national team coefficients updated after the completion of the qualifying group stage (excluding the play-offs), which were released by UEFA on 14 October 2015. Teams were drawn consecutively into Group A to F. First, the Pot 1 teams were assigned to the first positions of their groups, while next the positions of all other teams were drawn separately from Pot 4 to 2 (for the purposes of determining the match schedules in each group). The draw resulted in the following groups: ==Venues==