After winning their second title in 2018 and falling agonisingly short in the 2022 final, France are expected to go deep in this summer's World Cup.
Long-serving head coach Didier Deschamps will step down after a fourth and final World Cup in charge of Les Bleus and has a typically talent-stacked group of players at his disposal.
Kylian Mbappe can leave a turbulent season at Real Madrid behind to enjoy a tournament that always seems to bring the best out of him. The star forward scored in the final victory over Croatia in Russia, while he became the second man in World Cup history to score a final hat-trick before Argentina prevailed on penalties in Qatar.
Mbappe has a lavishly gifted supporting cast, led by Paris Saint-Germain's 2025 Ballon d'Or winner Ousmane Dembele.
The Sporting News has all the key details on France's World Cup squad below.
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France World Cup roster 2026
Deschamps will name his final squad on May 14.
Teams had until Monday, May 11 to submit to FIFA an official preliminary list of 35-55 players, from which they are required to name a final roster by Saturday, May 30.
Below is the final list of players announced by France and Didier Deschamps on May 14. Caps and stats are correct as of May 12.
| Pos | Name | Club | Caps |
| GK | Mike Maignan | AC Milan (Serie A, Italy) | 38 |
| GK | Robin Risser | Lens (Ligue 1, France) | 0 |
| GK | Brice Samba | Rennes (Ligue 1, France) | 4 |
| DEF | Lucas Digne | Aston Villa (Premier League, England) | 56 |
| DEF | Malo Gusto | Chelsea (Premier League, England) | 9 |
| DEF | Lucas Hernandez | Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France) | 41 |
| DEF | Theo Hernandez | Al-Hilal (Pro League, Saudi Arabia) | 42 |
| DEF | Ibrahima Konate | Liverpool (Premier League, England) | 27 |
| DEF | Jules Kounde | Barcelona (La Liga, Spain) | 46 |
| DEF | Maxence Lacroix | Crystal Palace (Premier League, England) | 2 |
| DEF | Dayot Upamecano | Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany) | 36 |
| DEF | William Saliba | Arsenal (Premier League, England) | 31 |
| MID | N'Golo Kante | Al-Ittihad (Pro League, Saudi Arabia) | 67 |
| MID | Manu Kone | AS Roma (Serie A, Italy) | 12 |
| MID | Adrien Rabiot | AC Milan (Serie A, Italy) | 57 |
| MID | Aurelien Tchouameni | Real Madrid (La Liga, Spain) | 44 |
| MID | Warren Zaire-Emery | Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France) | 10 |
| FWD | Maghnes Akliouche | Monaco (Ligue 1, France) | 7 |
| FWD | Bradley Barcola | Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France) | 18 |
| FWD | Rayan Cherki | Manchester City (Premier League, England) | 5 |
| FWD | Ousmane Dembele | Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France) | 58 |
| FWD | Desire Doue | Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France) | 6 |
| FWD | Jean-Philippe Mateta | Crystal Palace (Premier League, England) | 3 |
| FWD | Kylian Mbappe | Real Madrid (La Liga, Spain) | 96 |
| FWD | Michael Olise | Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany) | 15 |
| FWD | Marcus Thuram | Inter Milan (Serie A, Italy) | 33 |
France World Cup qualifying results
France finished in first place in UEFA Group D, securing their automatic place in the draw in December by beating Slovakia. France had 16 points from six games and a six-point advantage over Ukraine.
France World Cup history
France has won the World Cup twice, first in 1998, then again in 2018.
- World Cups appearances: 16
- Best finish: Winners (1998, 2018)
- All-time record (W-L-D): 39-14-20
- All-time goals scored: 136
- All-time goals conceded: 85
France World Cup squad analysis
France boast arguably the greatest depth of elite quality of any of the tournament favourites.
Centre-backs William Saliba and Dayot Upamecano are each arguably coming off the seasons of their career at club level.
Veterans N'Golo Kante and Adrien Rabiot remain in the frame in midfield alongside Real Madrid star Aurelien Tchouameni. However, Didier Deschamps went light on midfielders beyond them, surprisingly leaving Eduardo Camavinga off the list in favour of an extra defender in Maxence Lacroix of Crystal Palace.
The attack is without Antoine Griezmann, a majestic talisman of the Deschamps era, who has now retired from international football. However, Mbappe, Michael Olise and Dembele — along with a formidable array of alternative options — will make up the most feared forward line at the World Cup. Randal Kolo Muani, who famously had his potential World Cup-winning shot saved by Emi Martinez four years ago, was left off the deep list of attackers, while Marcus Thuram of Inter Milan made the cut.
France injuries ahead of World Cup
France's most notable absentee is Liverpool forward Hugo Ekitike.
Despite a disappointing campaign for Arne Slot's side overall, Ekitike has enjoyed an impressive debut season in England, scoring 17 goals in 45 appearances across competitions.
But a ruptured Achilles tendon suffered against Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League brought his season to an abrupt halt and ended his World Cup dream.
At 23, Ekitike's time should come again and France are amply stacked in forward areas.
MORE: A full list of injured star players as the World Cup nears
France players to watch at World Cup
Michael Olise has been a revelation since joining Bayern Munich from Crystal Palace in 2024, firmly establishing himself as one of the best wingers in world football.
A limp showing in Bayern's second leg loss to PSG in the Champions League semifinals quelled Ballon d'Or talk, but that's nothing a strong World Cup can't fix.
The battle to start as one of France's support attackers is set to be fierce, but Rayan Cherki's off-the-cuff playmaking talents could provide an important point of difference. At times during his debut season at Manchester City, Cherki has been the most dazzling player in the Premier League.
MORE: Forgotten Rayan Cherki moment shows Man City's hard-hitting maverick is boxing clever
Who is France coach at the World Cup?
Deschamps is the longest-serving coach at this summer's World Cup, having taken over almost a quarter if a century ago in 2012. This will be his fourth World Cup at the helm after 2014, 2018 and 2022. He has steered France to the past two finals.
An exemplary defensive midfielder during his playing day, Deschamps captained France to glory at the 1998 World Cup and Euro 2000. As such, he is one of his country's most esteemed footballing figures.
Throughout his time in charge of France, Deschamps has invited regular criticism for perceived conservative tactics when he has such an enviable array of attacking players. He would love another major tournament success to end those debates once and for all.
Can France replace players on World Cup roster?
Once the final roster is official, participating teams at the World Cup could only make changes before the first game of the tournament, and only in the case of extraordinary circumstances.
According to the official tournament rules (page 32), "a player listed on the final list may only be replaced in the event of serious injury or illness up until 24 hours before the start of his team's first match."
France World Cup history
France have won the World Cup twice, with Deschamps integral to both successes.
The Juventus midfielder was the Les Bleus captain when they demolished Brazil 3-0 on an emotional night in Paris in 1998. Zinedine Zidane scored twice in the first half before Emmanuel Petit sealed victory.
Twenty years later, Deschamps was the head coach as France beat Croatia 4-2 in Moscow. After an unfortunate Mario Mandzukic own goal (the Croatia striker later scored at the other end following an error from France goalkeeper Hugo Lloris), Griezmann scored from the penalty spot. Paul Pogba and Mbappe made sure of glory with fine second-half strikes.
France have also been runners-up on two occasions, suffering penalty shootout defeats to Italy and Argetina in 2006 and 2018 respectively.
- Current FIFA World Ranking: No. 1 (March 2026)
- World Cup titles: 2 (1998, 2018)
- World Cup appearances (last): 16 (Qatar 2022)
- How France qualified, W-L-D: UEFA Group D winners, 5-1-0
- World Cup record:
- Games: 73 GP (39 W, 14 D, 20 L)
- Goal difference: +51 (136 GS, 85 GA)
France World Cup schedule
France, as a Pot 1 team, were drawn into Group I. Their competitors in the group will be Senegal, Iraq and Norway.
| France | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Senegal | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Iraq | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Norway | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
France and Group E match schedule
| Date | Time (ET) | Match | Location |
| Tue, Jun. 16 | 3 p.m. | France vs. Senegal | MetLife Stadium, New York/NJ |
| Tue, Jun. 16 | 6 p.m. | Iraq vs. Norway | Gillette Stadium, Foxborough |
| Mon, Jun. 22 | 5 p.m. | France vs. Iraq | Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia |
| Mon, Jun. 22 | 8 p.m. | Norway vs. Senegal | MetLife Stadium, New York/NJ |
| Fri, Jun. 26 | 3 p.m. | Norway vs. France | Gillette Stadium, Foxborough |
| Fri, Jun. 26 | 3 p.m. | Senegal vs. Iraq | BMO Field, Toronto |
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