Major-minor nations split in World Cup qualifying
England won 10-0 in San Marino during qualification for the 2022 World Cup Uefa will create a two-tier qualification process for the 2030 World Cup which will mean major countries will no longer play minor nations such as San Marino, Gibraltar and Andorra.
England won 10-0 in San Marino during qualification for the 2022 World Cup Uefa will create a two-tier qualification process for the 2030 World Cup which will mean major countries will no longer play minor nations such as San Marino, Gibraltar and Andorra. Critics have long campaigned for qualifying to be changed to remove uncompetitive games. Under the new rules, the top 36 countries - as determined by the 2028 edition of the Nations League - will be drawn into three groups of 12 teams in League 1.
The remaining 18 nations will play in a separate tournament, which is considered to create a fairer system where they have a greater chance of results. Qualification has also been completely revamped to mirror the Champions League format. For the 2026 World Cup, some countries played six qualifiers but some played eight.
Now all will play six. Every team in the 12-team group will play six home-or-away matches against six different opponents - two per pot. It moves qualifying away from the regular format where teams would play all opponents in their group home and away.
The best-ranked teams of each group of League 1 will qualify for the World Cup, with the remaining places allocated via play-offs. Uefa has not confirmed the breakdown of the automatic slots. The remaining 18, lower-ranked countries - under the current format, effectively all but the group winners in Nations League C and all seven countries in Nations League D - will take part in League 2.