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UEFA European Championship qualifying


FieldValue
nameUEFA European Championship qualifying
founded1958
number of teams55 (currently eligible)
56 (overall)
regionEurope (UEFA)
qualifier forUEFA European Championship
related compsUEFA Nations League
websiteOfficial website

56 (overall)

The UEFA European Championship qualifying, branded as the European Qualifiers, is the process that UEFA-affiliated national football teams go through in order to qualify for the UEFA European Championship.

In this article, the years represent the final tournaments of the European Championship, and are not meant to correspond to the actual dates when the qualification matches were played.

Format evolution

YearGroupsTeams
1960
1964
196883–4
197284
197684
198074–5
198474–5
198874–5
199274–5
199685–6
200095–6
2004105
200877–8
201295–6
201695–6
2020105–6
2024105–6
2028124–5

The 1960 and 1964 qualifications were knock-out tournaments. The four quarter-final-winning teams qualified for the final stages, and one of them was chosen to host the competition.

From 1968 onwards, a group stage began to be used as the main, or sole, component of qualification. In 1968, 1972 and 1976, the winners of the eight groups advanced to a quarter-final stage, which was still part of the qualifying. The four quarter-final winners progressed to the finals. Again, the host nation was selected among the four finalists.

From 1980, the hosting rights would be assigned in advance, and the host teams would be guaranteed automatic qualification. The format of the finals was expanded to feature 8 teams. Winners of qualifying groups now proceeded to the finals directly. The 1980, 1984, 1988 and 1992 qualifications included seven groups, the winners of which would join the hosts in the finals, although in 1992 one winner was eventually banned from appearing and was replaced by the runner-up of its group.

From 1996, a 16-team format was employed for the main tournament. Runners-up in qualifying groups now could also gain access to the finals. Play-off pairings were introduced as a second opportunity for teams that narrowly miss out on direct qualification. The 1996 qualifying consisted of eight groups; the group winners as well as the six best runners-up qualified, and so did the winner of the play-off between the remaining two runners-up, joining the host country.

In 2000, the first-placed teams in the nine qualifying groups as well as the best runner-up progressed directly to the finals, while another four spots were taken by winners of play-offs contested by the remaining runners-up. For the first time there were two host countries; they both received automatic berths in the finals.

In 2004, along with the host team, the ten qualifying group winners advanced, as did the winners of the five play-off ties formed by the runners-up.

In 2008, the top two teams from each of the seven qualifying groups joined the two host teams to bring the number of finalists to 16. No play-off stage was held.

The 2012 qualification replicated the format of that of 2000: places were taken by nine group winners and the best runner-up, while the other runners-up determined four more finalists via play-offs, with the two host countries qualifying by default.

Starting from 2016, the finals format was expanded again, now featuring 24 teams. It became possible for third-placed teams in qualifying groups to get to the Euros too. The 2016 qualifying included nine groups; the winners, the runners-up, and the best third-placed team advanced directly, while play-offs played by the other third-placed teams determined the last four finalists. The host nation still qualified automatically. The 2016 qualification tournament was the first one to be branded as the European Qualifiers, a trademark used from that point on for both the European Championship qualifications and the FIFA World Cup qualification tournaments in Europe.

From 2020, qualification began to be linked with the newly created UEFA Nations League: participation in the qualifying play-offs was now determined based on the teams' performances in that competition and not in qualification itself. The play-offs themselves were restructured into four-team brackets consisting of semi-finals and a final. In the 2020 qualifying, the top two teams of the ten qualifying groups took twenty places in the main tournament. From each of the four divisions of the 2018–19 Nations League, the four best-ranked teams not already qualified for Euro 2020 filled in a play-off bracket for that division, and the winner of each bracket got a spot in the Euros as well. There were no automatic berths for Euro 2020 as it was hosted by multiple cities across the continent. It was actually postponed until 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic but retained its original branding.

In a similar fashion, the 2024 qualifying granted spots to the winners and runners-up of the ten qualifying groups, while this time only the top three divisions of the 2022–23 Nations League formed play-off brackets to determine three more finalists, and the host country got an automatic spot.

For 2028, the number of groups will be increased to twelve. The winners will advance to the finals, while the runners-up will either also advance directly or participate in play-offs. It is to be announced how many and which of the four host countries will qualify by default or will play qualification matches.

Number of teams entering

FRA
1960ESP
1964ITA
1968BEL
1972YUG
1976ITA
1980FRA
1984FRG
1988SWE
1992ENG
1996BEL
NED
2000POR
2004AUT
SUI
2008POL
UKR
2012FRA
2016EUR
2020GER
2024ENG
IRL
SCO
WAL
2028ITA
TUR
2032
Total valid entries1729313232313232344749505051535553
Played at least one match2833
Qualified through qualification4444477771514151414232423
Qualified automatically00000111112122101
Total finalists444448888161616161624242424

Participating teams

All national teams that are members of UEFA are eligible to enter the qualification for the European Championship. A total of 56 distinct entities have made attempts to qualify for the European Championship. Of those, 55 are still active in the competition. Due to political changes, a few of the entities have appeared under multiple incarnations (see the footnotes to the below table), and the East Germany team is now defunct.

Saarland, a former UEFA member, merged into West Germany in 1957 and therefore did not enter the qualifiers of any European Championships.

YearDebuting teamsSuccessor teamsRenamed teamsTeamsNo.CT
1960, , ,As recognised by UEFA, the Czech Republic and Slovakia are considered equal successors of Czechoslovakia from the 1996 qualification. , ,East Germany competes as part of the reunited nation of Germany since the 1992 qualification. , , , , , , , , ,The Soviet Union was succeeded and replaced for the 1992 finals by the provisional Commonwealth of Independent States team, which in turn was succeeded by Russia from the 1996 qualification. , , Yugoslavia was succeeded from the 2000 qualification by FR Yugoslavia / Serbia and Montenegro, which in turn was succeeded by Serbia from the 2008 qualification.1717
1964, , , , , , , , , , ,1229
1968, , , West Germany was succeeded by the reunited nation of Germany from the 1992 qualification.433
1972033
1976033
1980033
1984033
1988033
1992,235
1996,Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Estonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, and Ukraine competed as parts of the Soviet Union from 1960 to 1992. All of them except Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania also competed in the 1992 finals as parts of the Commonwealth of Independent States. , , ,Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, and Slovenia competed as parts of Yugoslavia from 1960 to 1992. Kosovo and Montenegro then competed as parts of FR Yugoslavia / Serbia and Montenegro from 2000 to 2004. Kosovo then competed as part of Serbia in 2008, before unilaterally breaking off from it and eventually being admitted to UEFA. , , , , , , ,Macedonia was renamed as North Macedonia from the 2020 qualification. , ,1550, ,
2000,252FR Yugoslavia was renamed as Serbia and Montenegro during the 2004 qualification.
2004052
2008153
2012154
2016155
2020156
2024056

;Successor teams inheriting the records of former teams

;Teams competing as parts of other teams

;Renamed teams

;Other notes

Overview

Team1960196419681972197619801984198819921996200020042008201220162020202420282032Team1960196419681972197619801984198819921996200020042008201220162020202420282032
r163/34/45/54/45/56/65/64/55/75/6****4/6****
6/65/57/76/66/65/66/6
6/65/64/57/83/65/55/64/5
QFr163/42/43/42/53/53/44/54/63/53/5****4/6************
6/65/65/58/85/65/65/54/5
4/65/55/54/74/64/64/5+p4/6
pr2/4****1/4QF********3/53/43/6****3/55/83/6************
3/64/54/72/6+p3/6+p4/6+p5/6+p
r16r161/4QF2/43/44/53/42/54/5****4/5****3/75/54/64/5+p5/5
****3/5************************
4/44/44/44/45/55/55/55/64/54/56/75/55/64/65/5
(1996–)
(1960–1992)****pr2/42/4********3/52/42/5********************************
r16****4/44/44/45/5************************4/7****3/5+p********
r16r162/43/42/43/53/42/5
pr****1/4QF2/4****2/5********************3/7****************
6/65/64/56/72/6+p4/65/55/5+p
5/55/66/65/57/76/65/65/65/5
4/44/44/43/44/44/44/54/63/54/54/84/64/6****3/6+p
****QF1/4QF3/43/42/4****3/5************************************
3/66/65/56/75/65/64/5+p****
(1992—)
(1960–1988)2/3********************************************************
6/65/55/5
r162/43/42/4****3/52/53/53/63/6************6/63/63/5+p
r16****1/4QF****2/42/44/53/54/54/54/64/56/73/6************
pr4/45/54/54/54/55/54/63/56/74/5****3/6+p4/6+p
5/62/5+p3/54/73/64/65/6+p3/6+p
r16****1/4QF3/4****4/5****2/5************************************
6/86/65/65/64/6+p
3/5+p5/6
5/64/6****5/74/66/66/65/5
6/66/65/57/75/55/66/66/6
3/64/64/55/74/55/65/54/5
QF4/44/44/44/45/55/54/45/65/55/57/76/65/64/53/6+p
pr4/44/44/45/55/55/56/65/55/57/76/66/66/65/5
4/65/54/55/75/66/66/64/5
2/5+p4/65/53/5
r163/42/4********2/5****************************4/6********
(2020–)
(1996–2016)4/64/54/55/75/66/6****4/5
r164/43/42/42/52/53/43/53/64/55/53/75/6****3/5+p5/6
r16pr4/44/44/45/54/45/53/53/6****2/5+p3/73/53/6+p3/6+p3/5
r16pr3/42/42/42/53/44/53/44/63/53/5********************
QFpr2/42/43/43/5****3/52/5********************************
prQF3/44/42/43/53/5****2/42/6+p2/5+p3/53/7********3/5+p4/5
QFpr2/41/4QF2/43/4****2/43/5********3/5****3/6****4/6+p****
(1996–)
(1960–1992)****************1/4QF4/42/4************3/6********************
5/56/65/55/57/76/66/66/66/6
2/43/43/44/54/44/5********2/6+p2/5+p3/73/54/6********
(2008–)
(2004)
(1996–2004)
(1960–1992)****r16****1/4QF****2/4****2/41/5dsq****3/53/83/64/53/5+p****
(1996–)
(1960–1992)****pr2/42/4********3/52/42/53/63/63/54/74/6************
5/6****2/5+p6/74/63/6+p4/6****
QF****1/4QF2/41/4QF************3/5********************************
QF3/43/43/43/42/52/5****3/5************************3/5
pr3/42/44/44/52/44/52/5****3/5********3/5************
r16pr4/43/43/42/44/54/44/4********2/5+p****2/6+p****************
4/62/6+p3/54/7****************
pr3/43/41/4QF3/42/43/42/45/64/52/5+p5/74/5********3/5+p

Key

  • = successful qualifying campaign
  • = did not take part in qualifying
  • **** = participated in the final tournament
Was not a UEFA member

Team records

The below table compares the overall records of all teams that have participated in qualification. Teams are ordered by points using the three points for a win system, then by goal difference, and then by goals scored. Note that this order does not represent any official rankings, and qualification tournaments are not direct competitions between all teams.

The "Qualifying attempts" column only counts qualifying campaigns where the team played at least one match, while the "Appearances in the finals" also include automatic qualifiers.

As per statistical convention in football, matches decided in extra time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.

Legend
Team has qualified for the main tournament
Team has not qualified for the main tournament
Team is defunct (and never qualified for the main tournament)

Notes on the table:

  • The 1992 qualifying attempt is treated as successful for Yugoslavia and unsuccessful for Denmark for the purposes of the table
  • The Austria vs Greece match (1968 qualifying), which was declared void, is not taken into account.
  • For the following matches, which were annulled and then replayed, only the replays are counted: Netherlands vs Cyprus (1988 qualifying) and Georgia vs Russia (2004 qualifying).
  • For the following matches, where the scorelines were awarded, the awarded scorelines, rather than the original ones, are taken into account: Denmark vs Sweden (2008 qualifying), Italy vs Serbia (2012 qualifying), Serbia vs Albania (2016 qualifying), and Montenegro vs Russia (2016 qualifying).
  • In the 2016 qualifying, Serbia was deducted 3 points and Croatia was deducted 1 point, which is reflected in the table.

The table is updated to the 2024 qualifying.

Rank
(unoff.)TeamQualifying attemptsAppearances
in the finalsOverall qualification recordPointsTotalSuccessfulPldWDLGFGAGDTotalAvg
117121213396181933996+2433062.301
2
171111132852423263108+1552792.114
3
16121213081292026894+1742722.092
415101112678321624085+1552662.111
515101112583162629199+1922652.120
615101111679261128068+2122632.267
71689125762623252109+1432542.032
81591112074281826094+1662502.083
9
13121410676201026768+1992482.340
101766136694126242123+1192481.824
11
1766136712639233145+882391.757
121567122652829232119+1132231.828
1317910133643138227155+722231.677
141567122642731211123+882191.795
15
1676122643028221137+842191.795
161755139632947226181+452181.568
171544130623038200147+532161.662
181733138554142199151+482061.493
191644127602542184144+402051.614
201766128563141166159+71991.555
211634118553033192125+671951.653
221634117571842219162+571891.615
231722130503347171154+171831.408
241711133502756181183−21771.331
251556110482933194133+611731.573
261622120482646145149−41701.417
271611130472756140167−271681.292
288777850171114850+981662.128
291511124392461143182−391411.137
3082286361733119100+191251.453
311411118341965115176−611211.025
327237033191810165+361181.686
3380081321732123107+161131.395
3470075291234104114−10991.320
351422109242659100177−77980.899
368118022134575135−60790.988
378117821124583119−36750.962
38
8117819184184124−40750.962
398007421124163122−59751.014
40800462012147657+19721.565
411500122191588101316−215720.590
428007718164362118−56700.909
438007617154474121−47660.868
448007614134962150−88550.724
458007815105351151−100550.705
461600127131310164338−274520.409
4750054138335392−39470.870
4840036910172956−27371.028
49800768115748182−134350.461
5090086787146225−179290.337
51150012041410254335−281260.217
5280078596422235−213240.308
53200195772428−4221.158
5470070136617189−17260.086
5590086018511371−36010.012
563002600265128−12300.000

Notes

References

References

  1. "United Nations Security Council Resolution 757 (Implementing Trade Embargo on Yugoslavia)". University of Minnesota Human Rights Center.
  2. UEFA.com. (2013-04-15). "European qualifiers branding launched".
  3. UEFA.com. (2023-06-18). "What is the UEFA Nations League?".
  4. UEFA.com. (2023-01-25). "New formats for UEFA men’s national team competitions approved".
  5. Dunbar, Graham. (2023-01-25). "UEFA to have smaller groups for World Cup, Euros qualifying".
  6. Gardner, Jamie. (2023-01-25). "UEFA to introduce quarter-final stage and play-offs to men’s Nations League".
  7. "European Championship 1968".
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