2025 FIFA Club World Cup qualification

The 2025 FIFA Club World Cup qualification was the qualifying process which decided the 32 participants in the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup. The final tournament was played in the United States from June 14 to July 13, 2025.

The majority of teams qualified based on performance in their respective confederation's club championships. Only a single play-in match was played as part of qualification which determined the final team in the Club World Cup.

Slot allocation

On February 14, 2023, the FIFA Council approved the slot allocation for the 2025 tournament based on a "set of objective metrics and criteria". UEFA were awarded the most slots with twelve, while CONMEBOL were given the second most with six. The AFC, CAF, and CONCACAF were all given four slots, while the OFC and the host association were given one slot each.[1] On March 14, the FIFA Council approved the key principles of the access list for the tournament.[2] The principles were as follows, considering competitions completed during a four-year period from 2021 to 2024:

  • CONMEBOL and UEFA (more than four slots): access for the winners of the confederation's top club competition between 2021 and 2024, with additional teams determined by a club ranking of the four-year period
  • AFC, CAF, and CONCACAF (four slots each): access for the winners of the confederation's top club competition between 2021 and 2024[note 1]
  • OFC (one slot): access for the highest-ranked club among the winners of the confederation's top club competition between 2021 and 2024[note 2]
  • Host country (one slot): this was determined at a later stage.

If a club won two or more seasons of their confederation's top club competition, additional teams were determined by a club ranking of the four-year period. A restriction of two clubs per association was applied, with an exception for champion clubs if more than two clubs from the same association won their confederation's top club competition. The calculation method for the four-year club rankings within each confederation was based on sporting criteria during seasons completed between 2021 and 2024, and was finalized after consultation with confederations and stakeholders.[2]

Host club selection

As with previous editions of the Club World Cup, the new format allocated a slot reserved for the host nation.[3] Traditionally, this slot was filled by the defending champion of the host nation. The champion of Major League Soccer was determined by a postseason playoff rather than the regular season record (in the case of the 2024 season, it was the LA Galaxy).[4] The exact qualification method had been left undetermined for an extended period of time into the 2024 regular season. At the mid-season MLS All-Star Game, league commissioner Don Garber suggested that the spot could be filled with the 2024 MLS Supporters' Shield winner, the MLS Cup 2024 winner, or a possible playoff between them.[5][6]

On October 19, 2024, FIFA president Gianni Infantino appeared on the pitch shortly after Inter Miami CF's 6–2 home win over the New England Revolution on Decision Day, and officially announced that the final slot would be given to Inter Miami as winners of the 2024 Supporters' Shield, prior to the beginning of the 2024 MLS Cup playoffs and after Inter Miami had already won the Shield.[7] The rationale for this was considered to be because the Club World Cup has traditionally taken the host champions through who won silverware in the "league setting."[8] FIFA explained that it chose the Supporters' Shield winner because that award reflects a league setting, as opposed to MLS Cup. It also stated that it made the decision prior to Inter Miami CF's win, but could not announce it until regulations were approved in pre-scheduled conventions.[8]

This decision came under criticism from fans and media pundits for its lack of transparency, lack of qualification by traditional sporting merit, and as an attempt to court sponsors by ensuring that Lionel Messi would feature in the tournament.[4][9] On November 10, 2024, Inter Miami was eliminated from the MLS Cup playoffs by Atlanta United FC in the first round.[10] Despite this, then-Inter Miami head coach Gerardo Martino defended the selection of the team, arguing that the Supporters' Shield was enough justification for selection.[11]

Qualified teams

The following teams qualified for the tournament:[12][13][14][15] Years in bold indicate winner of that year's Club World Cup.

Confederation Team(s) Qualification Qualified date(s) Participation
AFC (4 slots) Saudi Arabia Al-Hilal Winners of the 2021 AFC Champions League March 14, 2023[note 3] 4th (Previous: 2019, 2021, 2022)
Japan Urawa Red Diamonds Winners of the 2022 AFC Champions League May 6, 2023 4th (Previous: 2007, 2017, 2023)
United Arab Emirates Al Ain Winners of the 2023–24 AFC Champions League May 25, 2024 2nd (Previous: 2018)
South Korea Ulsan HD Best-ranked eligible team in the AFC four-year ranking April 17, 2024 3rd (Previous: 2012, 2020)
CAF (4 slots) Egypt Al Ahly Winners of the 2020–21 CAF Champions League March 14, 2023[note 3] 10th (Previous: 2005, 2006, 2008, 2012, 2013, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023)
Morocco Wydad AC Winners of the 2021–22 CAF Champions League March 14, 2023[note 3] 3rd (Previous: 2017, 2022)
Tunisia Espérance de Tunis Best-ranked eligible team in the CAF four-year ranking April 26, 2024 4th (Previous: 2011, 2018, 2019)
South Africa Mamelodi Sundowns Second-best ranked eligible team in the CAF four-year ranking April 26, 2024 2nd (Previous: 2016)
CONCACAF (4 slots) Mexico Monterrey Winners of the 2021 CONCACAF Champions League March 14, 2023[note 3] 6th (Previous: 2011, 2012, 2013, 2019, 2021)
United States Seattle Sounders FC Winners of the 2022 CONCACAF Champions League March 14, 2023[note 3] 2nd (Previous: 2022)
Mexico Pachuca Winners of the 2024 CONCACAF Champions Cup June 1, 2024 5th (Previous: 2007, 2008, 2010, 2017)
United States Los Angeles FC[note 4] Winners of play-in match May 31, 2025 1st
CONMEBOL (6 slots) Brazil Palmeiras Winners of the 2021 Copa Libertadores March 14, 2023[note 3] 3rd (Previous: 2020, 2021)
Brazil Flamengo Winners of the 2022 Copa Libertadores March 14, 2023[note 3] 3rd (Previous: 2019, 2022)
Brazil Fluminense Winners of the 2023 Copa Libertadores November 4, 2023 2nd (Previous: 2023)
Brazil Botafogo Winners of the 2024 Copa Libertadores November 30, 2024 1st
Argentina River Plate Best-ranked eligible team in the CONMEBOL four-year ranking May 14, 2024[21] 3rd (Previous: 2015, 2018)
Argentina Boca Juniors Second-best ranked eligible team in the CONMEBOL four-year ranking August 22, 2024 2nd (Previous: 2007)
OFC (1 slot) New Zealand Auckland City Best OFC Champions League winners in the OFC four-year ranking[note 2] December 17, 2023 12th (Previous: 2006, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2022, 2023)
UEFA (12 slots) England Chelsea Winners of the 2020–21 UEFA Champions League March 14, 2023[note 3] 3rd (Previous: 2012, 2021)
Spain Real Madrid Winners of the 2021–22 UEFA Champions League March 14, 2023[note 3] 7th (Previous: 2000, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2022)
England Manchester City Winners of the 2022–23 UEFA Champions League June 10, 2023 2nd (Previous: 2023)
Germany Bayern Munich Best ranked eligible team in the UEFA four-year ranking December 17, 2023[note 5] 3rd (Previous: 2013, 2020)
France Paris Saint-Germain Second-best ranked eligible team in the UEFA four-year ranking December 17, 2023[note 5] 1st
Italy Inter Milan Fourth-best ranked eligible team in the UEFA four-year ranking December 17, 2023[note 5] 2nd (Previous: 2010)
Portugal Porto Fifth-best ranked eligible team in the UEFA four-year ranking December 17, 2023[note 5] 1st
Portugal Benfica Seventh-best ranked eligible team in the UEFA four-year ranking December 17, 2023[note 5] 1st
Germany Borussia Dortmund Third-best ranked eligible team in the UEFA four-year ranking March 6, 2024 1st
Italy Juventus Eighth-best ranked eligible team in the UEFA four-year ranking March 12, 2024 1st
Spain Atlético Madrid Sixth-best ranked eligible team in the UEFA four-year ranking April 16, 2024 1st
Austria Red Bull Salzburg Ninth-best ranked eligible team in the UEFA four-year ranking April 17, 2024 1st
Host (1 slot) United States Inter Miami CF Winners of the 2024 MLS Supporters' Shield October 19, 2024[7] 1st

By nation

Nation Clubs
Brazil Brazil (4) Botafogo
Flamengo
Fluminense
Palmeiras
United States United States (3) Inter Miami CF
Los Angeles FC
Seattle Sounders FC
Argentina Argentina (2) Boca Juniors
River Plate
England England (2) Chelsea
Manchester City
Germany Germany (2) Bayern Munich
Borussia Dortmund
Italy Italy (2) Inter Milan
Juventus
Mexico Mexico (2) Monterrey
Pachuca
Portugal Portugal (2) Benfica
Porto
Spain Spain (2) Atlético Madrid
Real Madrid
Austria Austria (1) Red Bull Salzburg
Egypt Egypt (1) Al Ahly
France France (1) Paris Saint-Germain
Japan Japan (1) Urawa Red Diamonds
Morocco Morocco (1) Wydad AC
New Zealand New Zealand (1) Auckland City
Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia (1) Al-Hilal
South Africa South Africa (1) Mamelodi Sundowns
South Korea South Korea (1) Ulsan HD
Tunisia Tunisia (1) Espérance de Tunis
United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates (1) Al Ain

Confederation qualification

For confederations other than UEFA, the method was as follows:[22]

  • 3 points for a win
  • 1 point for a draw
  • 3 points for successful progression to each new stage of the competition

The method used by UEFA to calculate the club coefficient was "exceptionally applied" to rank the European teams,[22][note 6] and was as follows:

  • 2 points for a win
  • 1 point for a draw
  • 4 points for qualification for the Group stage
  • 5 points for qualification for the round of 16
  • 1 point for progress to each stage of the competition thereafter
Key
Qualified as the host
Qualified through winning the competition
Qualified through the confederation ranking
Qualified through the play-in match[note 4]

AFC

Table showing the top ten in the AFC rankings, as well as other relevant teams.

AFC ranking
Rank Team Total
points
Competition
points
Match
points
W D L Performance
2021 2022 2023–24
1 Saudi Arabia Al-Hilal 118 42 76 24 4 5 Champions Final Semi-finals
2 South Korea Ulsan HD 81 27 54 16 6 5 Semi-finals Group stage Semi-finals
3 South Korea Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors 80 30 50 13 11 3 Quarter-finals Semi-finals Quarter-finals
4 Japan Kawasaki Frontale 64 15 49 15 4 2 Round of 16 Group stage Round of 16
5 Saudi Arabia Al-Nassr 61 21 40 12 4 3 Semi-finals Quarter-finals
6 Japan Yokohama F. Marinos 60 21 39 12 3 6 Round of 16 Final
7 South Korea Pohang Steelers 56 21 35 10 5 3 Final Round of 16
8 Qatar Al-Duhail 53 18 35 10 5 6 Group stage Semi-finals Group stage
9 Japan Urawa Red Diamonds 49 18 31 9 4 4 Champions Group stage
10 Thailand BG Pathum United 46 18 28 8 4 9 Round of 16 Quarter-finals Group stage
11 United Arab Emirates Al-Ain 43 15 28 9 1 4 Champions

CAF

Table showing the top ten in the CAF rankings.

CAF ranking
Rank Team Total
points
Competition
points
Match
points
W D L Performance
2020–21 2021–22 2022–23 2023–24
1 Egypt Al Ahly 140 48 92 26 14 6 Champions Final Champions Champions
2 Morocco Wydad AC 108 36 72 21 9 9 Semi-finals Champions Final Group stage
3 Tunisia Espérance de Tunis 100 36 64 17 13 10 Semi-finals Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
4 South Africa Mamelodi Sundowns 98 30 68 19 11 6 Quarter-finals Quarter-finals Semi-finals Semi-finals
5 Algeria CR Belouizdad 63 21 42 11 9 10 Quarter-finals Quarter-finals Quarter-finals Group stage
6 Angola Petro de Luanda 58 21 37 9 10 11 Group stage Semi-finals Group stage Quarter-finals
7 Tanzania Simba 55 18 37 11 4 9 Quarter-finals Quarter-finals Quarter-finals
8 Morocco Raja CA 45 12 33 10 3 3 Quarter-finals Quarter-finals
9 Sudan Al Hilal 35 12 23 5 8 11 Group stage Group stage Group stage Group stage
10 Democratic Republic of the Congo TP Mazembe 32 12 20 5 5 6 Group stage Semi-finals

CONCACAF

Table showing the top ten in the CONCACAF rankings, as well as other relevant teams.

CONCACAF ranking
Rank Team Total
points
Competition
points
Match
points
W D L Performance
2021 2022 2023 2024
1 Mexico Monterrey 52 21 31 10 1 2 Champions Semi-finals
2 Mexico León[note 4] 47 21 26 8 2 4 Round of 16 Quarter-finals Champions
3 Mexico América[note 4] 44 21 23 7 2 4 Final Semi-finals
4 United States Philadelphia Union 41 21 20 5 5 4 Semi-finals Semi-finals Round of 16
5 Mexico Cruz Azul 39 18 21 6 3 3 Semi-finals Semi-finals
6 United States Columbus Crew 37 18 19 5 4 2 Quarter-finals Final
7 Mexico Pachuca 34 15 19 5 4 0 Round of 16 Champions
8 Mexico UANL 32 15 17 4 5 1 Semi-finals Quarter-finals
9 United States Seattle Sounders FC 28 12 16 4 4 0 Champions
10 United States Los Angeles FC[note 4] 25 12 13 4 1 3 Final
21 United States Inter Miami CF 10 6 4 1 1 2 Quarter-finals

CONMEBOL

Table showing the top ten in the CONMEBOL rankings, as well as other relevant teams.

CONMEBOL ranking
Rank Team Total
points
Competition
points
Match
points
W D L Performance
2021 2022 2023 2024
1 Brazil Flamengo 141 45 96 29 9 6 Final Champions Round of 16 Quarter-finals
2 Brazil Palmeiras 140 45 95 27 14 4 Champions Semi-finals Semi-finals Round of 16
3 Brazil Atlético Mineiro 122 42 80 22 14 7 Semi-finals Quarter-finals Round of 16 Final
4 Argentina River Plate 103 33 70 20 10 8 Quarter-finals Round of 16 Round of 16 Semi-finals
5 Brazil Fluminense 97 33 64 18 10 5 Quarter-finals Champions Quarter-finals
6 Argentina Boca Juniors 71 27 44 10 14 5 Round of 16 Round of 16 Final
7 Brazil Athletico Paranaense 59 21 38 11 5 5 Final Round of 16
8 Paraguay Olimpia 57 21 36 10 6 10 Quarter-finals Group stage Quarter-finals
9 Uruguay Nacional 57 18 39 10 9 9 Group stage Group stage Round of 16 Round of 16
10 Brazil São Paulo 53 18 35 9 8 3 Quarter-finals Quarter-finals
22 Brazil Botafogo 37 15 22 6 4 3 Champions

OFC

For the OFC, only the best-ranked club that were continental champions qualified for the tournament. The confederation ranking was therefore not applicable, as Auckland City won all three OFC Champions League competitions in this qualification timeframe.

OFC ranking
Rank Team Total
points
Competition
points
Match
points
W D L Performance
2022 2023 2024
1 New Zealand Auckland City 66 27 39 12 3 0 Champions Champions Champions

UEFA

Table showing the top twenty in the UEFA rankings.

UEFA ranking
Rank Team Total
points
Competition
points
Match
points
W D L Performance
2020–21 2021–22 2022–23 2023–24
1 England Manchester City 123 45 78 34 10 4 Final Semi-finals Champions Quarter-finals
2 Spain Real Madrid 119 46 73 32 9 9 Semi-finals Champions Semi-finals Champions
3 Germany Bayern Munich 108 41 67 30 7 5 Quarter-finals Quarter-finals Quarter-finals Semi-finals
4 France Paris Saint-Germain 85 40 45 19 7 14 Semi-finals Round of 16 Round of 16 Semi-finals
5 England Chelsea 79 32 47 21 5 7 Champions Quarter-finals Quarter-finals
6 Germany Borussia Dortmund 79 35 44 18 8 11 Quarter-finals Group stage Round of 16 Final
7 Italy Inter Milan 76 34 42 16 10 9 Group stage Round of 16 Final Round of 16
8 England Liverpool 76 31 45 21 3 7 Quarter-finals Final Round of 16
9 Portugal Porto 68 32 36 16 4 12 Quarter-finals Group stage Round of 16 Round of 16
10 Spain Atlético Madrid 67 33 34 12 10 12 Round of 16 Quarter-finals Group stage Quarter-finals
11 Germany RB Leipzig 62 31 31 14 3 13 Round of 16 Group stage Round of 16 Round of 16
12 Spain Barcelona 61 27 34 15 4 11 Round of 16 Group stage Group stage Quarter-finals
13 Portugal Benfica 52 24 28 10 8 8 Quarter-finals Quarter-finals Group stage
14 Italy Juventus 47 22 25 12 1 9 Round of 16 Round of 16 Group stage
15 Italy Napoli 42 19 23 10 3 5 Quarter-finals Round of 16
16 Spain Sevilla 42 21 21 6 9 11 Round of 16 Group stage Group stage Group stage
17 Italy Milan 41 19 22 8 6 10 Group stage Semi-finals Group stage
18 Austria Red Bull Salzburg 40 21 19 6 7 13 Group stage Round of 16 Group stage Group stage
19 Netherlands Ajax 39 17 22 10 2 8 Group stage Round of 16 Group stage
20 Italy Lazio 35 18 17 6 5 5 Round of 16 Round of 16

Play-in match

León was originally set to participate in the tournament as the winner of the 2023 CONCACAF Champions League. However, the team was removed from the tournament by the FIFA Appeal Committee on March 21, 2025, due to violating the rules on multi-club ownership, as León and Pachuca have the same owner.[23] On May 6, 2025, the Court of Arbitration for Sport rejected appeals by León, Pachuca, and Alajuelense, who originally brought the case to FIFA. León's expulsion was confirmed by FIFA; their spot in the Club World Cup remaining vacant until further notice. In the same press release, FIFA announced that the vacant spot would not be given on merit, and instead ordered Los Angeles FC, the runners-up to León in the 2023 CONCACAF Champions League, and Club América, the top-ranked team in the CONCACAF confederation ranking at the conclusion of the 2024 CONCACAF Champions Cup to compete against each other in a one-off match. FIFA also confirmed that the final spot would be awarded to the winner of the play-in, with further details coming at a later date.[24][25] On May 16, 2025, FIFA officially announced the match would be held on May 31, hosted by Los Angeles FC at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles.[26]

Los Angeles FC United States2–1 (a.e.t.)Mexico América
  • Jesus 89'
  • Bouanga 115'
Report
Attendance: 20,714
Los Angeles FC
América
GK 1 France Hugo Lloris
RB 14 Spain Sergi Palencia Yellow card 66'
CB 33 United States Aaron Long (c) downward-facing red arrow 106'
CB 4 Colombia Eddie Segura
LB 24 United States Ryan Hollingshead
CM 8 United States Mark Delgado Yellow card 62' downward-facing red arrow 74'
CM 6 Brazil Igor Jesus Yellow card 59'
CM 11 United States Timothy Tillman Yellow card 110'
RF 27 El Salvador Nathan Ordaz downward-facing red arrow 68'
CF 17 United States Jeremy Ebobisse downward-facing red arrow 74'
LF 99 Gabon Denis Bouanga
Substitutions:
FW 30 Venezuela David Martínez upward-facing green arrow 68'
FW 9 France Olivier Giroud upward-facing green arrow 74'
FW 22 Turkey Cengiz Ünder upward-facing green arrow 74'downward-facing red arrow 90+4'
FW 23 United States Frankie Amaya Yellow card 104' upward-facing green arrow 90+4'
DF 5 Brazil Marlon upward-facing green arrow 106'
MF 20 Ghana Yaw Yeboah upward-facing green arrow 120'
DF 21 Canada Ryan Raposo upward-facing green arrow 120'
Manager:
United States Steve Cherundolo
GK 1 Mexico Luis Malagón
RB 3 Mexico Israel Reyes Yellow card 119'
CB 4 Uruguay Sebastián Cáceres Yellow card 18' downward-facing red arrow 85'
CB 5 Mexico Kevin Álvarez downward-facing red arrow 91'
LB 26 Colombia Cristian Borja downward-facing red arrow 91'
CM 28 Mexico Érick Sánchez
CM 13 Mexico Alan Cervantes downward-facing red arrow 46'
RW 17 United States Alejandro Zendejas Yellow card 89' downward-facing red arrow 89'
AM 8 Spain Álvaro Fidalgo (c)
LW 11 Chile Víctor Dávila downward-facing red arrow 46'
CF 27 Uruguay Rodrigo Aguirre downward-facing red arrow 89'
Substitutions:
MF 6 Mexico Jonathan dos Santos upward-facing green arrow 46'
MF 7 Uruguay Brian Rodríguez upward-facing green arrow 46'
DF 29 Mexico Ramón Juárez upward-facing green arrow 85'
DF 32 Mexico Miguel Vázquez upward-facing green arrow 89'
DF 18 Mexico Cristian Calderón upward-facing green arrow 89'
MF 10 Chile Diego Valdés upward-facing green arrow 91'
MF 24 Netherlands Javairô Dilrosun upward-facing green arrow 91'
Manager:
Brazil André Jardine

Man of the Match:
Denis Bouanga (Los Angeles FC)[27]

Assistant referees:
Bruno Pires (Brazil)
Bruno Boschilia (Brazil)
Fourth official:
Ramon Abatti (Brazil)

Notes

  1. ^ As the AFC Champions League was shifted from an intra-year schedule to an inter-year schedule starting from 2023–24, only three seasons of the AFC Champions League were completed within the consideration period of 2021 to 2024. As a result, the remaining slot was allocated using the four-year club ranking.
  2. ^ a b As the 2021 OFC Champions League was cancelled, the slot was awarded to the best club in the OFC's four-year ranking that won the competition between 2022 and 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i The teams' participation was confirmed on March 14, 2023, with the approval of the access list. However, the teams won the competitions (that eventually qualified them for the Club World Cup) on the following dates: Al Hilal (November 23, 2021), Al Ahly (July 17, 2021), Wydad AC (May 30, 2022), Monterrey (October 28, 2021), Seattle Sounders FC (May 4, 2022), Palmeiras (November 27, 2021), Flamengo (October 29, 2022), Chelsea (May 29, 2021), and Real Madrid (May 28, 2022).
  4. ^ a b c d e Originally León was set to participate in the tournament as winner of the 2023 CONCACAF Champions League. On March 21, 2025, the team was removed from the competition due to violating the FIFA Appeal Committee's rules on multi-club ownership, as León and Pachuca have the same owner. On May 6, 2025, the Court of Arbitration for Sport rejected appeals by León, Pachuca, and Alajuelense. FIFA confirmed León's exclusion and ordered a one-off match between Los Angeles FC and América to take place, the winner of which would qualify for the Club World Cup.[16][17][18][19] On May 31, Los Angeles FC beat América 2–1 in extra time to claim the final tournament spot.[20]
  5. ^ a b c d e Five eligible teams qualified on December 17, 2023, via four-year confederation rankings, when the qualifying procedure was confirmed. These teams were both guaranteed a place in the top eight and could not be made ineligible by two teams from their own national association accumulating more points.[15]
  6. ^ The system was only applied over a four year timeframe, instead of the usual five years, applied only to the Champions League competition.

References

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  3. ^ "FIFA Council highlights record breaking revenue in football". FIFA. February 14, 2023. Archived from the original on February 14, 2023. Retrieved February 14, 2023.
  4. ^ a b Bushnell, Henry (October 19, 2024). "FIFA gives Lionel Messi, Inter Miami a spot in 2025 Club World Cup". Yahoo Sports. Archived from the original on November 11, 2024. Retrieved November 11, 2024.
  5. ^ "MLS Commissioner Don Garber: 2024 MLS All-Star Game Media Availability Quote Sheet". MLSsoccer.com. July 25, 2024. Archived from the original on November 11, 2024. Retrieved November 11, 2024.
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  9. ^ Spiers, Tim (October 20, 2024). "Lionel Messi at the Club World Cup makes sense – but how he got there is ridiculous". The Athletic. Archived from the original on November 11, 2024. Retrieved November 11, 2024.
  10. ^ Phillips, Mitch (November 11, 2024). "Club World Cup slot softens the blow of Miami defeat". Reuters. Retrieved November 11, 2024.
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  14. ^ "Club World Cup 2025: How qualification works & list of qualified teams India". Goal.com. December 21, 2023. Archived from the original on April 7, 2024. Retrieved December 22, 2023.
  15. ^ a b "FIFA Club World Cup 2025™ Confederations ranking". FIFA. Archived from the original on June 21, 2024. Retrieved June 13, 2024.
  16. ^ "FIFA Appeal Committee decision on CF Pachuca and Club León". FIFA.com. Fédération Internationale de Football Association.
  17. ^ "FIFA wants América-LAFC playoff for last Club World Cup spot". ESPN. April 15, 2025.
  18. ^ "CAS rejects appeals by Club León, Pachuca and Alajuelense". Retrieved 6 May 2025.
  19. ^ "FIFA takes decision on last FIFA Club World Cup 2025™ participating team". FIFA.com. Fédération Internationale de Football Association.
  20. ^ Abnos, Alexander (1 June 2025). "Denis Bouanga leads LAFC to Club World Cup berth with win v América – as it happened". The Guardian.
  21. ^ "Mundial de Clubes FIFA 25™ place in sight for River Plate". FIFA. May 14, 2024. Archived from the original on June 21, 2024. Retrieved May 15, 2024.
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  25. ^ "FIFA takes decision on last FIFA Club World Cup 2025 participating team" (Press release). FIFA. May 6, 2025. Retrieved May 6, 2025.
  26. ^ "Heavyweights LAFC and Club América to clash in Los Angeles on 31 May for final FIFA Club World Cup 2025 berth" (Press release). FIFA. May 16, 2025. Retrieved May 16, 2025.
  27. ^ "HISTORIC: LAFC secure FIFA Club World Cup spot over Club América". Major League Soccer. June 1, 2025. Retrieved June 30, 2025.