Draw My World Cup

Create your own World Cup draw and see how the groups would look

How to draw your World Cup:

  1. Select playoff winners in the pots using the dropdowns (or leave them as Any to automatically use the highest-ranked team by FIFA ranking).
  2. Mark one favorite team with the heart (❤️) and one team you do not like with the skull (💀). The heart gives your favorite team easier opponents (from the 2 weakest possible), while the skull gives the disliked team harder opponents (from the 2 strongest possible).
  3. Click "Draw groups" to generate the groups. You can repeat the draw as many times as you like.

Choose the color theme for your groups to match your favorite team or country.

World Cup 2026 logo

World Cup 2026

Group stage draw with confederation constraints and custom playoff slots

Group A
Group B
Group C
Group D
Group E
Group F
Group G
Group H
Group I
Group J
Group K
Group L

World Cup 2026 Draw - Create and Analyze Your Own Group Stage

World Cup 2026 Tournament & Group Draw Explained

The 2026 FIFA World Cup will be hosted across Canada, Mexico and the United States with 48 national teams competing in an expanded group stage. Teams are seeded into four pots based on FIFA ranking and qualification path, then drawn into twelve groups while respecting confederation rules so that nations from the same region are limited within each group. Understanding how the official World Cup 2026 draw works helps fans better analyze potential groups, matchups and paths to the knock-out rounds.

Interactive World Cup 2026 Draw Simulator

The Draw My World Cup tool on Yamal World App lets you recreate the World Cup 2026 group draw with real seeding rules, playoff paths and confederation constraints. You can choose winners of play-offs, mark a favorite team to receive slightly easier opponents or a disliked team to face tougher squads, and instantly generate complete groups. This interactive simulator is perfect for exploring alternative World Cup scenarios, sharing custom draws and better understanding how small changes in the draw can reshape the entire tournament.