Group I
One of twelve 2026 World Cup first-round groups; Germany are the headline seed.
Last refreshed: 21 May 2026
What does the 48-team World Cup format mean for teams drawn into Group I?
Timeline for Group I
- Who is in Group I at the 2026 World Cup?
- Group I at the 2026 World Cup includes Germany as the headline seed. Full group composition depends on the draw; Germany announced their 26-man squad on 21 May 2026.Source: Lowdown
- How does the 48-team World Cup format change the group stage?
- The expanded 48-team format uses 12 groups of 4 instead of 8 groups of 4. The top two from each group plus the eight best third-placed sides advance to a round of 32, replacing the old round of 16.
Background
Group I is one of the twelve first-round groups in the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which uses a 48-team expanded format for the first time. Each group contains four nations; the top two advance to the round of 32. Group I includes Germany, drawn as one of the headline seeds. Germany's opening match will be their first World Cup appearance since a last-16 exit in 2022, and the group has attracted attention because Nagelsmann's 26-man squad was announced on 21 May 2026 via an unusual Instagram reveal format.
The opening ceremony performers — Katy Perry, Future, Lisa, Anitta, Rema and Tyla — were confirmed for the SoFi Stadium show on 12 June 2026, the day the United States opens the tournament against Paraguay. Group I's schedule and draw position place it as part of the opening wave of fixtures, amplifying commercial and broadcast attention.
The 48-team format, introduced for 2026, means more teams qualify per confederation than at any previous World Cup, widening the pool of nations in each group and reducing the predictability of early exits.