By Victor Kanayo
Saudi Arabia and Qatar have been awarded the hosting rights for the fourth round of Asia’s 2026 World Cup preliminaries in October.
This was disclosed by the Asian Football Confederation in a statement on Friday.
According to the Federation, the pair have reached the next phase of the continent’s qualifiers and will be joined by Iraq, Oman, Indonesia and the United Arab Emirates in the draw, which takes place on 17 July.
The decision to award the rights to Saudi Arabia and Qatar comes after Iraq confirmed earlier this week that they had bid to host one of the groups.
Teams will be divided into two groups of three nations, and the winners of each will join Japan, Australia, Iran, Uzbekistan, South Korea and Jordan in qualifying for the newly expanded 48-nation finals from the continental preliminaries.
Games will be played across three match days from 8 to 14 October 2025.
The runners-up in each group will advance to a play-off in November, with the winners of that clash featuring in an intercontinental play-off tournament in March to determine the two remaining World Cup spots.
The six competing nations qualified for the fourth phase by finishing either third or fourth in their respective groups in the third round of qualifying, which was completed on Tuesday.