The 2026 FIFA World Cup draw occurred on December 5 in Washington, D.C., placing Japan in Group F with the Netherlands, Tunisia, and a European playoff winner. Defending champions Argentina will face Algeria, Austria, and Jordan, while hosts Mexico and the U.S. drew favorable groups. The ceremony featured U.S. President Donald Trump receiving FIFA's new peace prize.
The 2026 FIFA World Cup draw ceremony at Washington's Kennedy Center on December 5 kicked off the final countdown to the first 48-team tournament, set to span North America for the first time since 1994. The 104-game event will unfold across 11 NFL stadiums, three venues in Mexico, and two in Canada, with the ceremony extending nearly as long as a match amid falling snow and celebrity attendees. U.S. President Donald Trump, Mexico's Claudia Sheinbaum, and Canada's Mark Carney drew their nations' balls, joined by athletes like Tom Brady and Shaquille O'Neal, as Trump received FIFA's new peace prize.
Japan landed in Group F with the Netherlands, Tunisia, and a European playoff winner from Sweden, Ukraine, Albania, or Poland, a matchup seen as manageable with the Dutch as the main challenge. The tournament opens June 11 in Mexico City with Mexico facing South Africa in Group A, which also includes South Korea and a playoff winner from Czech Republic, Ireland, Denmark, or North Macedonia—a repeat of their 2010 opener that ended 1-1. The U.S., in Group D, starts June 12 against Paraguay in Inglewood, California, followed by Australia on June 18 in Seattle and a playoff opponent on June 25 at SoFi Stadium. U.S. coach Mauricio Pochettino said, "Full respect, but yes, believing that we can go through, but we need to perform. We need to evolve and be better every time that we are together."
Defending champions Argentina, in Group J, open against Algeria—a tough draw recalling their 2022 upset loss to Saudi Arabia—alongside Austria and debutants Jordan. Spain, the top-ranked team, got a favorable Group H with Cape Verde, Saudi Arabia, and Uruguay. Brazil faces Morocco, Haiti, and Scotland in Group C, while France in Group I meets Senegal in a 2002 upset rematch, plus Norway and a playoff winner. England, in Group L, starts against Croatia, with Ghana and Panama. Germany in Group E plays Curaçao—the smallest nation ever at 156,000 population—Ecuador, and Ivory Coast.
With 42 teams set and six playoff spots to be decided by March 31, the 12 groups advance their winners, runners-up, and top eight third-placers to the round of 32. Quarterfinals onward will be in the U.S., culminating in the July 19 final at East Rutherford, New Jersey. Venues and kickoff times for group games are due Saturday. Mexico coach Javier Aguirre noted, "There are no small opponents. We must not get complacent, we have to work hard." The seeding ensures top-four teams—Spain, Argentina, France, England—avoid early clashes if they top their groups, though paths like France potentially facing Germany, Netherlands, and Spain en route to the final add intrigue.