The stakes are simple but unforgiving: only the winner of each group will advance to the prestigious Concacaf Women’s Championship, which serves as the final gateway to the global stage.
Regional landscape
The qualifiers are divided into six groups, each packed with ambition:
- Group A: Mexico, Puerto Rico, St Lucia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, US Virgin Islands
- Group C: Costa Rica, Guatemala, Bermuda, Grenada, Cayman Islands
- Group D: Haiti, Dominican Republic, Suriname, Belize, Anguilla
- Group E: Panama, Cuba, St Kitts and Nevis, Curacao, Aruba
- Group F: Trinidad and Tobago, El Salvador, Honduras, Barbados
Conspicuously absent from this phase are the region’s two powerhouses—the United States and Canada, who are automatically seeded into the next round.
Roadmap to the championship
The Concacaf W Qualifiers will unfold across FIFA women’s international windows in November 2025, February 2026, and April 2026. At the conclusion of the group stage, the six winners will join the United States and Canada in the Concacaf W Championship, an eight-team showdown that begins with the quarter-finals.
Quarter-final matchups will be seeded based on FIFA Women’s Rankings, ensuring the top-ranked team meets the lowest-ranked challenger. Victory at this stage carries enormous weight: the four winners will not only reach the semi-finals but also secure automatic qualification for the FIFA Women’s World Cup Brazil 2027.
Second chances and Olympic dreams
For those who falter in the quarter-finals, hope still remains. The four losing sides will enter a play-in round, where two more tickets to the World Cup Intercontinental Play-Off will be at stake.
Beyond World Cup qualification, the Concacaf W Championship carries additional glory. The two finalists will book places at the 2028 Los Angeles Summer Olympics Women’s Football Tournament. Should the United States—already qualified as host—reach the final, the third-place finisher would inherit the region’s second Olympic berth.
A rising standard in Concacaf
The United States remain the reigning Concacaf W champions, having edged Canada 1–0 in Monterrey in 2022. That tournament served as the qualifier for the 2023 Women’s World Cup, where a record six Concacaf nations—USA, Canada, Costa Rica, Jamaica, Panama, and Haiti—graced the global stage.
For Jamaica, who proudly competed in both 2019 and 2023, this campaign offers the chance to cement their place among the elite of women’s football with a third successive World Cup appearance.
