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2026 AFC Futsal Asian Cup
| Piala Asia Futsal AFC 2026 |
|---|
| Indonesia |
| 27 January – 7 February |
| 16 (from 1 confederation) |
| 2 (in 1 host city) |
| Iran (14th title) |
| Indonesia |
| 31 |
| 166 (5.35 per match) |
| Muhammad Osamanmusa Kazuya Shimizu Hossein Tayebi(6 goals each) |
| Saeid Ahmadabbasi |
| Ahmad Habiebie |
| Iraq |
| ← 2024 2028 → |
The 2026 AFC Futsal Asian Cup was the 18th edition of the AFC Futsal Asian Cup, the biennial international futsal championship organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) for the men's national teams of Asia. Indonesia hosted the tournament for the second time after first hosting the tournament back in 2002.
Iran were the defending champions, having won its record 13th title in 2024. They successfully retained the title.
Initially, Pakistan and Indonesia expressed interest to host the tournament. Later, Indonesia was selected as hosts by the AFC Futsal Committee on 8 November 2024.
The draw for the qualifiers was held on 26 June 2025. The host Indonesia qualified directly for the final tournament, while the other teams competed in the qualifying stage for the remaining 15 spots. The qualifiers were played between 20 September and 22 October 2025.
The draw took place in Jakarta on 5 November 2025 at 14:00 local time (UTC+7).
The 16 teams were drawn into four groups of four teams. This is the first time seeding based on FIFA Futsal World Ranking instead of teams' performance at the qualification and the final of the previous edition. The host Indonesia were automatically placed in the first seed of Group A.
| Pot 1 | Pot 2 | Pot 3 | Pot 4 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Indonesia (23) (hosts) Iran (5) Thailand (11) Japan (13) | Uzbekistan (19) Vietnam (26) Afghanistan (33) Iraq (41) | Kuwait (43) Tajikistan (46) Saudi Arabia (48) Kyrgyzstan (49) | Australia (53) Lebanon (54) South Korea (73) Malaysia (81) |
The tournament will be held at two venues in Jakarta.
The capacity of the venues listed below are the maximum capacity, as the seating of the Indonesia Arena for this tournament were reduced due to three of four telescopic seating being closed.
| Jakarta | |
|---|---|
| Indonesia Arena | Jakarta International Velodrome |
| Capacity: 16,500 | Capacity: 8,500 |
The AFC selected 10 referee pairs to officiate the tournament.
| Pair | Pair |
|---|---|
| Andrew Best Oya Tsubasa | |
| Abdulrahman Al-Doseri Timur Ramazanow | |
| Liu Jianqiao Leung Chung Yin | |
| Wahyu Wicaksono Hawkar Ahmed | |
| Ebrahim Mehrabi Yahya Al-Athwani | |
| Abdulaziz Al-Sarraf Elias Al-Hakim | |
| Helday Idan Lee Po-fu | |
| Majid Al Hatmi Fahad Al-Hosani | |
| Sukhrob Sattorov Anatoliy Rubakov | |
| Grairod Pornnarong Trương Quốc Dũng |
Each team was required to registered a squad with a minimum of 14 players and a maximum of 25 players, at least two of whom had to be goalkeepers (Regulations Article 23).
Teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 7.3):
- Points in head-to-head matches among tied teams;
- Goal difference in head-to-head matches among tied teams;
- Goals scored in head-to-head matches among tied teams;
- If more than two teams were tied, and after applying all head-to-head criteria above, a subset of teams were still tied, all head-to-head criteria above were reapplied exclusively to this subset of teams;
- Goal difference in all group matches;
- Goals scored in all group matches;
- Penalty shoot-out if only two teams were tied and they met in the last round of the group;
- Disciplinary points (yellow card = 1 point, red card as a result of two yellow cards = 3 points, direct red card = 3 points, yellow card followed by direct red card = 4 points);
- Drawing of lots.
In the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out are used to decide the winner if necessary (Regulations Article 15.1).
This was the first time ever that Indonesia and Iran met together in final. For Indonesia, this was their first appearance in an AFC final at any level since the U-20 team did in 1970 Youth tournament. This was also the first time Iran conceded 5 goals in the final match.
The following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:
| Top scorer | Best player | Best goalkeeper | Fair-play award |
|---|---|---|---|
| Muhammad Osamanmusa | Saeid Ahmadabbasi | Ahmad Habiebie | Iraq |
In situations where several players are tied in the number of goals, they use other criteria such as assists or average minutes per goal.
There were 166 goals scored in 31 matches, for an average of 5.35 goals per match.
6 goals
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal
1 own goal
- AFC Futsal Asian Cup, the-AFC.com
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