The 2026 FIFA World Cup is coming, and the continent is ready. Hosted across the United States, Canada and Mexico, this edition expands to 48 teams, and the Confederation of African Football has been allocated 10 representatives, the largest African presence at any World Cup in history. For fans, the qualifying campaign has been as gripping as anything the tournament itself will deliver.
And it will likely get better when the tourney begins. Another area that will be in focus will be sports betting. As iGaming expert Kate Richardson, mentioned in one of her reviews, ‘‘we are bracing up for an unprecedented amount of betting activities in the upcoming tournament. From the initial activities recorded in futures betting so far, this World Cup will probably break the record in terms of wagering volume.’’ And the punters getting ready to wager on the matches are not limited to Africa. Many are in South America, Europe, North America, and even Gulf states like the UAE.
For punters in the UAE who want to wager on the outcomes of these ties, remember to do your due diligence and understand the matches and markets before you sign up. Also, get familiar with the sportsbooks and their odds. Reviews and guides can bridge your knowledge gap. For instance, a platform like MightyTips which boasts a team of international sports betting experts, can give you insights on the teams to back and show you the bookmakers to use, among other things. With the necessary guidance, you will be able to identify the most reliable bookmakers to use for online betting in the UAE and save yourself a lot of time and trouble.
Back to the mundial. FIFA and its President Gianni Infantino said clearly: “Football unites the world.” It definitely does, and what the representatives of Africa do will have a huge role to play in strengthening that unity.
What Fans Can Expect from the 10 African Countries to Play in the FIFA World Cup 2026
These 10 African teams will fly the continent’s flag at the 2026 Mundial:
- Cape Verde
- South Africa
- Tunisia
- Algeria
- Ghana
- DR. Congo
- Ivory Coast
- Egypt
- Senegal
- Morocco
Here is what each of them brings to North America.
1. Cape Verde
The Blue Sharks have been the surprise package of recent CAF qualification cycles. Their tactical discipline has shown they can compete with the continent’s established names. A first World Cup appearance would be a historic moment for a footballing nation that has been building quietly for years.
2. South Africa
Bafana Bafana carry the memory of 2010 into every qualification campaign. Their progress through the qualification cycle has been steady and the squad blends domestic talent with overseas experience in a way that gives them genuine depth. The Football Association has worked hard to stabilize things since the 2022 cycle.
3. Tunisia
Tunisia arrives at World Cups and makes things difficult for everyone they face. Defensive organization over individual goalscorers, collective shape over individual flair. They have been solid through previous campaigns and teams that underestimate their discipline tend to regret it.
4. Algeria
Les Fennecs are back and they want it badly. Missing out recently sharpened something in this squad. The legacy of players like Rabah Madjer and Lakhdar Belloumi runs through the culture of the team and a new generation has been inspired by it. Their technical quality makes them strong favorites to come out of group G.
5. Ghana
The Black Stars bring drama wherever they go. A hat-trick out of nowhere, a group game that swings on a single moment, a result nobody predicted. Ghana’s history in the FIFA World Cup is built on exactly that kind of unpredictability and 2026 should be no different.
6. DR Congo
The Leopards have not been at a World Cup since Zaire represented the continent in 1974. That absence has fuelled something. Their physical style and pace in behind make them a threat in any final group, and the hunger to return to this stage after so long is not something you can replicate through preparation alone.
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7. Ivory Coast
The Elephants arrive with individual quality across every position. They have the kind of attacking depth that makes qualification look routine when things are clicking. Maintain their current form and they will be one of the more dangerous African teams in the group stage.
8. Egypt
Egypt’s Football Association has been building toward this with real intent. The country has a rich history at this level and the desire to see their most creative players perform in North American stadiums is driving everything. A passionate fanbase and a technically gifted squad make them one of the more complete African teams in the tournament.
9. Senegal
The Lions of Teranga, who are also the reigning Africa Cup of Nations champions, set the bar in 2022 and they remain the benchmark for national teams across the continent. Balanced across every line, experienced in big occasions, and with a squad depth that most teams cannot match. They arrive at the 2026 world cup as the most complete African side in the field.
10. Morocco
They became the first African team to reach a World Cup semi-final in 2022 and nothing has been the same since. The Atlas Lions carry expectations now that would have seemed unrealistic a decade ago, but this squad has shown it can handle them. Morocco’s achievement rewrote what African football could look like at this level.
Final Thoughts
Roger Milla’s corner-flag celebration. Zaire in 1974. The Super Eagles of Nigeria. The Indomitable Lions of Cameroon. African football has been building its World Cup story across decades and the 2026 edition gives it 10 teams and the biggest stage the tournament has ever had.
Three things worth noting heading in. The expansion to 48 teams has created a historic slot allocation for CAF. Nine qualifiers came in via the direct route, and the inter-confederation playoff added a tenth team in Dr. Congo. Also, the expectations after Morocco’s run mean the pressure and the belief are both higher than they have ever been.
As Angelique Kidjo told The Guardian: “Africa is a continent that has so much talent, wealth and potential. We know it and, at the same time, we can’t even fully grasp it yet.”
Across the group stage matches in group E, F, G and beyond, that talent will be visible to the entire world. Whether an African nation can go further than Morocco managed in 2022 is the question that will run through the whole tournament. The answer is closer than it has ever been.
