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As we edge closer to the 2027 Rugby World Cup in Australia, the qualification picture is starting to sharpen. With the introduction of a 24-team tournament for the first time, the stakes are high—not just for rugby’s powerhouses, but for the emerging nations fighting tooth and nail for a chance to prove they belong on the biggest stage.

As we edge closer to the 2027 Rugby World Cup in Australia, the qualification picture is starting to sharpen. With the introduction of a 24-team tournament for the first time, the stakes are high—not just for rugby’s powerhouses, but for the emerging nations fighting tooth and nail for a chance to prove they belong on the biggest stage.
While the majority of spots will have been filled through regional qualifiers and automatic placements, one place remains. Four teams will converge on Dubai this November for the Final Qualification Tournament. It’s the last roll of the dice. But before we look ahead to the desert showdown, it’s worth stepping back to understand how each contender could end up battling it out in the desert for the last spot in Australia.
Buckle up for a long read! But this is going to be the one stop shop for you to understand the remaining paths to RWC 2027!

The Sudamérica Rugby Championship is becoming a proving ground for some of rugby’s fastest-growing nations. Argentina, of course, booked their World Cup ticket long ago. But for Uruguay, Chile, Brazil, and Paraguay will now battle it out to secure, potentially 3 further South American teams at the RWC 2027!
1st place in the Championship will secure direct qualification to RWC 2027.
2nd place will enter a two-legged playoff against the lowest-ranked Pacific Nations Cup side.
3rd place moves on to the Final Qualification Tournament in Dubai.
This structure leaves little room for error. A single misstep could mean trading a direct path to Australia for a high-pressure tour through the UAE.
The Sudamérica Rugby Championship begins in July and concludes in October with 2 × 2 legged Semi Finals leading to the 1st place 2 legged Play off. We then get a 3rd place 2 legged play off to get the team that will head onto the Repechage! From my understanding, the 3rd place benefit for the Home and Away legs will be decided by Points Difference, but this is unclear. Having only 4 teams in the mix, this looks a long complex process but who are we to argue at the opportunity of watching more Rugby!
Saturday 19th July - Brazil v Chile
Saturday 26th July - Paraguay v Uruguay
Saturday 26th July - Chile v Brazil
Saturday 23rd August - Uruguay v Paraguay
1st Place Play Off
Saturday 30th August - SF Winner 1 v SF Winner 2
Saturday 6th September - SF Winner 2 v SF Winner 1
3rd Place Play Off
Saturday 11th October - SF Loser 4 v SF Loser 3
Saturday 18th October - SF Loser 3 v SF Loser 4
With how the draw is sat, looks comfortable to say a Chile and Uruguay could be through to the 1st place play off, leaving Brazil and Paraguay to go head to head for the Repechage spot. Thats not a foregone conclusion though and knockout style rugby can give teams a real impetus to step up. It will be a great Championship to watch!

The Pacific Nations Cup has become something of a balancing act. While Fiji and Japan already booked their spots, the remaining teams—Samoa, Tonga, USA, and Canada—are left to jostle for the remaining direct slots.
Top three finishers, not counting Fiji and Japan, go straight to the World Cup.
The team finishing 6th overall faces South America’s runner-up in a playoff.
The winner of that playoff? A golden ticket to Australia. The loser? A trip to Dubai to try their luck one last time.
For a team like the USA, that sixth-place finish isn’t just a disappointment—it’s a potential derailment of a long-term growth strategy aimed at rebuilding after missing the 2023 edition. However, the USA are getting strong opposition games in July to get ready for this tournament. They host Belgium, Spain and England in 3 consecutive weekends. Canada host Belgium, then Spain the following weekend. Both North American teams, have at least got solid game time ahead of the Pacific Nations Cup in August/ September.
23rd August - Canada v USA - Pool B
23rd August - Tonga v Samoa - Pool A
30th August - Fiji v Tonga - Pool A
30th August - Japan v Canada - Pool B
6th September - Samoa v Fiji - Pool A
6th September - USA v Japan - Pool B
5th Place Play Off
14th September - A3 v B3
Semi Finals
14th September - A2 v B1
14th September - A1 v B2
3rd Place Play Off
20th September - Loser SF 1 v Loser SF 2
Final
20th September - Winner SF 1 v Winner SF 2
With the 5th Place Play off & semi Finals all being played in Colorado on 1 day, this will be a great spectacle of rugby too! Then off to Salt Lake City for the 3rd Place Play Off and Final, where Utah will be looking to out do the spectacle in Colorado. With the team that loses the 5th place play off, starting the journey to the Play off against the team finishing 2nd in the Sudamérica Rugby Championship.
In a cross-continental playoff with a single prize, the runners-up of the Rugby Africa Cup and Asia Rugby Championship will meet in a one-off clash. The winner joins the repechage in Dubai. The loser goes home.
From Africa, it’s expected that Namibia will dominate again, but Kenya, Zimbabwe, and a few dark horses like Algeria are circling. Asia, meanwhile, continues to be led by Hong Kong China and South Korea, with Sri Lanka and the UAE also in the mix.
This matchup isn’t just a formality. In past cycles, Africa and Asia’s second-tier nations have produced tight, often scrappy contests that reflect just how slim the margins can be at this level.

With this tournament confimed to be hosted in Uganda between the 7th and 21st July! However, the format and confirmed dates of the tournament are still to be confirmed at the time of writing. What we do know is the following teams are confirmed to be in the tournament, Algeria, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Namibia, Senegal, Uganda, Zimbabwe and Morocco.
There is 2 potential possibilites for the tournament, which are outlined below!
Proposal 1
Match Day 1, July 8
Match 1 - 10 am -Zimbabwe v Morocco
Match 2 - 12 pm - Algeria v Ivory Coast
Match 3 - 2 pm - Namibia v Senegal
Match 4 - 4 pm, - Kenya v Uganda
Match Day two July 13
Match 5 - 10 am - Fifth place semi-final 2 : Loser Match 2 v Loser Match 3
Match 6 - 12 pm - Fifth place semi-final 1: Loser Match 1 v Loser Match 4
Match 7 - 2 pm - Cup semi-final 2: Winner Match 2 v Winner Match 3
Match 8 - 4 pm - Cup semi-final 2: Winner Match 1 v Winner Match 4
Match Day 3, July 19
Match 9 - 10 am - Seventh place final: Looser Match 5 v Loser Match 6,
Match 10 - 12 pm - Fifth place final: Winner Match 5 v Winner Match 6,
Match 11 - 2 pm - Third place play-off: Loser Match 7 v Loser Match 8,
Match 12 - 4 pm - Cup final: Winner Match 7 v Winner Match 8
Second proposal
Match Day 1, July 12
Match 1 - 10 am: - Zimbabwe v Morocco
Match 2 - 12 pm: - Algeria v Ivory Coast
Match 3 - 2 pm: - Namibia v Senegal
Match 4 - 4 pm - Kenya v Uganda
Match Day 2, July 16
Match 5 - 10 am - Fifth place semi-final 1: Loser Match 2 v Loser Match 3
Match 6 - 12 pm - Fifth place semi-final 2: Loser Match 1 v Loser Match 4
Match 7 - 2 pm - Cup Semi-final 2: Winner Match 2 v Winner Match 3
Match 8 - 4 pm - Cup Semi final 1: Winner Match 1 v Match 4
Match day 3, July 20
Match 9 - 10 am - Seventh place final: Loser Match 5 v Loser Match 6
Match 10 - 12 pm - Fifth place final: Winner Match 5 v Winner Match 6
Match 11 - 2 pm - Third place play off: Loser Match 7 v Loser Match 8
Match 12 - 4 pm - Cup final: Winner Match 7 v Winner Match 8

Asia Rugby Men’s Championship 2025
With Hong Kong China currently going strength to strength in Asia Rugby, they will be looking to take the top spot in the Championship and leave no doubt for their RWC qualification. This will leave Sri Lanka, Korea and UAE to battle it out for their spot at the Repechage. Will Korea manage to use their home advantage agaisnt UAE to soil the UAE chances of home advantage in the Repechage? Will Sri Lanka appear from nowhere with all of their current issues going on, or will Hong Kong China slip up?
The games to watch are below!
13th June - Sri Lanka v Korea
13th June - UAE v Hong Kong China
20th June - Korea v UAE
20th June - Hong Kong China v Sri Lanka
4th July - Sri Lanka v UAE
4th July - Korea v Hong Kong China
Final Play Offs before Repechage in November
South America/Pacific play-off - September 2025 TBC
Africa/Asia play-off - TBC July - October 2025
Set for November 8–18 at The Sevens Stadium in Dubai, the Final Qualification Tournament is rugby’s last-chance saloon. The format is round-robin: four teams, three matches each, one winner.
Confirmed Participants:
Belgium (Europe 3) – A gritty underdog that edged out the Netherlands in the Rugby Europe Championship.
Sudamérica 3 – Third-place finisher in a fiercely contested South American bracket.
Loser of South America/Pacific play-off – A side with World Cup aspirations delayed, not denied.
Winner of Africa/Asia play-off – The last to qualify, and possibly the most unpredictable.
There are no second chances in Dubai. Whoever tops the table goes to Australia. The rest, quite simply, don’t.
In the past, the Final Qualification Tournament has flown under the radar. But this year, it feels different. The expansion to 24 teams opens the door a little wider for tier-two and tier-three nations. And that’s good for rugby.
If we want a truly global game—one where teams like Chile, Portugal, or the USA can genuinely compete—then we need tournaments like this to matter. Not just as a technicality, but as a stage. A proving ground.
Dubai won’t be hosting the World Cup. But for one of these teams, it could be where their World Cup story truly begins.