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List of men's national association football teams

Updated: 11/6/2025, 1:24:50 AM Wikipedia source

This is a list of the men's national association football teams in the world. The Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) is the world's most important governing body for association football. A majority of national association football teams in the world are members of FIFA or one of its affiliated continental confederations. A majority of them also represent sovereign states with wide international recognition, with 188 of 195 United Nations (UN) member and observer states holding membership of FIFA. A notable exception is the United Kingdom, which is not a member of FIFA in its own right but is represented in the governing body by the teams of its four constituent countries. Other UN members and one observer state have either held membership in a confederation in the past and subsequently lost it, or have never belonged to either FIFA or one of its recognised confederations. Membership of FIFA and its confederations also includes national teams representing a few states with limited international recognition, one associated state with no UN membership, a significant number of dependent territories, and a limited number of autonomous areas. A majority of states with limited recognition, however, have no membership of FIFA or any of its confederations. This list divides national teams into three main groups:

Teams that are either members of FIFA (211 teams), or have membership in a FIFA-affiliated continental confederation without being members of FIFA itself (11 teams). Teams that are not members of FIFA or any continental federation, but which represent UN member and observer states. This group includes five United Nations member states and one observer state (6 teams). Teams representing states with limited international recognition and no membership of FIFA or a confederation (6 teams), plus one representing an associated state with no membership of FIFA or a confederation. This list excludes other teams described by their supporters as 'national', which represent specific ethnic groups, cultural/historical regions, separatist or autonomist movements, speakers of specific languages, and micronations. These teams have historically participated in matches and tournaments outside FIFA's recognition, though some of them have sporadically or regularly played in friendly matches and tournaments against FIFA members. Some national teams with FIFA membership have disappeared due to belonging to a sovereign state or dependent territory which split into two or more states or territories (examples include the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, or the Netherlands Antilles), or by part of the territory becoming independent (such as the Ireland national football team, which ceased to exist as such after reaching a compromise with FIFA and recognising the Republic of Ireland national football team as representative of the independent part of Ireland). Other teams have disappeared by virtue of the states or territories they represented forming a new state by joining another entity or entities (examples include the teams representing Tanganyika and Malaya, which merged with other former colonies to respectively form the Tanzania and Malaysia football teams), or becoming part of an already existing state (as is the case with East Germany, which joined West Germany to form the unified Germany football team). In several cases the football records of dissolved teams are considered by FIFA as belonging to a successor entity (the Russia national team, for example, carries over the records of the Soviet Union national team). Defunct teams are listed on this page for historical purposes. Even if only members of FIFA and its affiliated confederations are taken into account, there are more national association football teams in the world than those of any other sport.

Tables

· Teams representing former states or territories
Czechoslovakia(Representation of Czechs and Slovaks in 1993)
Czechoslovakia(Representation of Czechs and Slovaks in 1993)
Preceding team
Czechoslovakia(Representation of Czechs and Slovaks in 1993)
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Czech Republic Slovakia
Other successor team(s)
Represented Czechoslovakia until its dissolution into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993. Jointly represented both nations during the remainder of their 1994 World Cup qualifying games.
Saar
Saar
Preceding team
Saar
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Joined the German Football Association; now part of the Germany national football team. Historical results and achievements listed separately.
Other successor team(s)
Represented the Saarland Protectorate from 1950 to 1956 before its union with the Federal Republic of Germany.
East Germany(officially German Democratic Republic)
East Germany(officially German Democratic Republic)
Preceding team
East Germany(officially German Democratic Republic)
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Joined the German Football Association; dissolved in November 1990. Historical results and achievements listed separately.
Other successor team(s)
Represented East Germany between 1952 and 1990, before reunification with West Germany.
Ireland
Ireland
Preceding team
Ireland
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Northern Ireland
Other successor team(s)
Republic of Ireland
Notes
Represented Ireland from 1882. From 1922, when the Irish Free State (later Republic of Ireland) left the United Kingdom, until 1953, it continued to pick players from across the Island of Ireland, before becoming restricted to players solely from Northern Ireland under pressure from FIFA.
Malaya
Malaya
Preceding team
Malaya
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Malaysia
Other successor team(s)
Represented the Federation of Malaya from 1953 until its union with Sarawak, North Borneo and Singapore to form Malaysia in 1963. Singapore, which gained independence in 1965, retained its preexisting national team.
Tanganyika
Tanganyika
Preceding team
Tanganyika
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Tanzania
Other successor team(s)
Represented Tanganyika until its union with Zanzibar as Tanzania in 1964. Zanzibar is an associate member of CAF and so is not a member of FIFA.
South Vietnam
South Vietnam
Preceding team
South Vietnam
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Vietnam
Other successor team(s)
Represented South Vietnam from 1949 until 1975. A separate team representing North Vietnam never received FIFA or AFC membership. On the reunification of Vietnam, both the North and South teams ceased to exist, with a unified Vietnam national football team taking the South's place in both FIFA and the AFC.
North Yemen(officially Yemen Arab Republic)
North Yemen(officially Yemen Arab Republic)
Preceding team
North Yemen(officially Yemen Arab Republic)
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Yemen
Other successor team(s)
Represented North Yemen from 1965 until its union with South Yemen in 1990.
South Yemen(officially People's Democratic Republic of Yemen)
South Yemen(officially People's Democratic Republic of Yemen)
Preceding team
South Yemen(officially People's Democratic Republic of Yemen)
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Joined the Yemen Football Association; now part of the Yemen national football team. Historical results and achievements listed separately.
Other successor team(s)
Represented South Yemen from 1965 until its union with North Yemen in 1990.
United Arab Republic
United Arab Republic
Preceding team
United Arab Republic
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Egypt
Other successor team(s)
Syria
Notes
Represented the United Arab Republic from 1958 to 1961 until the secession of Syria. Was considered a continuation of the previous Egypt national football team, which became its successor team. The team continued to be known as the United Arab Republic until 1970.
Russian Empire
Russian Empire
Preceding team
Russian Empire
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Soviet Union
Other successor team(s)
Represented Russian Empire from 1912 to 1923 until its transition into Soviet Union.
Soviet Union(officially Union of Soviet Socialist Republics)
Soviet Union(officially Union of Soviet Socialist Republics)
Preceding team
Soviet Union(officially Union of Soviet Socialist Republics)
Successor team(inherited position/results)
CIS
Other successor team(s)
Estonia Latvia Lithuania
Notes
Represented the Soviet Union from 1940 until its dissolution in 1991. This was considered a continuation of the team that had previously represented the Russian Empire. Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania had all had active football teams prior to their incorporation into the Soviet Union in 1940, and did not participate in the CIS team.
CIS
CIS
Preceding team
CIS
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Russia
Other successor team(s)
Armenia Azerbaijan Belarus Georgia Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Moldova  Tajikistan Turkmenistan Ukraine Uzbekistan
Notes
Represented the Commonwealth of Independent States from January to June 1992; until the end of the UEFA Euro 1992 tournament.
Yugoslavia
Yugoslavia
Preceding team
Yugoslavia
Successor team(inherited position/results)
FR Yugoslavia
Other successor team(s)
Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia North Macedonia Slovenia
Notes
Represented Yugoslavia between 1920 and 1992, before the dissolution of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia into Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, North Macedonia and Slovenia
Serbia and Montenegro
Serbia and Montenegro
Preceding team
Serbia and Montenegro
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Serbia
Other successor team(s)
Montenegro Kosovo
Notes
Represented the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, known as Serbia and Montenegro after 2003, from 1992 until its dissolution into Serbia and Montenegro in 2006; the unified team still played the 2006 FIFA World Cup, because the dissolution process was only concluded one week before the start of the tournament with Montenegro's declaration of independence, following the referendum in May of that year. Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008, and its national team was accepted into UEFA and FIFA in 2016.
Netherlands Antilles
Netherlands Antilles
Preceding team
Netherlands Antilles
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Curaçao
Other successor team(s)
Aruba Bonaire Sint Maarten
Notes
Aruba became a separate autonomous territory in 1986 and was accepted into FIFA in 1988. The former team represented the Netherlands Antilles until the dissolution of the country in 2010. Formerly known as "Curaçao", this name was restored in March 2011 when the new constituent country of Curaçao was given the Netherlands Antilles' place in FIFA and CONCACAF. The teams representing the former Netherlands Antilles territories of Bonaire and Sint Maarten are full members of CONCACAF but not of FIFA. Two other former Netherlands Antilles territories (Saba and Sint Eustatius) have fielded national teams in unofficial friendly matches in the past, but neither has membership of FIFA or a continental federation.
Artsakh
Artsakh
Preceding team
Artsakh
Successor team(inherited position/results)
None
Other successor team(s)
None
Notes
Represented the Republic of Artsakh (formerly known as Nagorno-Karabakh Republic), a state with limited recognition which officially ceased to exist on January 1, 2024, after a military offensive by Azerbaijan. As of September 2025, the team still appears on the ConIFA rankings table.
Preceding team
Successor team(inherited position/results)
Other successor team(s)
Notes
Czechoslovakia(Representation of Czechs and Slovaks in 1993)
Czech Republic Slovakia
Represented Czechoslovakia until its dissolution into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993. Jointly represented both nations during the remainder of their 1994 World Cup qualifying games.
Saar
Joined the German Football Association; now part of the Germany national football team. Historical results and achievements listed separately.
Represented the Saarland Protectorate from 1950 to 1956 before its union with the Federal Republic of Germany.
East Germany(officially German Democratic Republic)
Joined the German Football Association; dissolved in November 1990. Historical results and achievements listed separately.
Represented East Germany between 1952 and 1990, before reunification with West Germany.
Ireland
Northern Ireland
Republic of Ireland
Represented Ireland from 1882. From 1922, when the Irish Free State (later Republic of Ireland) left the United Kingdom, until 1953, it continued to pick players from across the Island of Ireland, before becoming restricted to players solely from Northern Ireland under pressure from FIFA.
Malaya
Malaysia
Represented the Federation of Malaya from 1953 until its union with Sarawak, North Borneo and Singapore to form Malaysia in 1963. Singapore, which gained independence in 1965, retained its preexisting national team.
Tanganyika
Tanzania
Represented Tanganyika until its union with Zanzibar as Tanzania in 1964. Zanzibar is an associate member of CAF and so is not a member of FIFA.
South Vietnam
Vietnam
Represented South Vietnam from 1949 until 1975. A separate team representing North Vietnam never received FIFA or AFC membership. On the reunification of Vietnam, both the North and South teams ceased to exist, with a unified Vietnam national football team taking the South's place in both FIFA and the AFC.
North Yemen(officially Yemen Arab Republic)
Yemen
Represented North Yemen from 1965 until its union with South Yemen in 1990.
South Yemen(officially People's Democratic Republic of Yemen)
Joined the Yemen Football Association; now part of the Yemen national football team. Historical results and achievements listed separately.
Represented South Yemen from 1965 until its union with North Yemen in 1990.
United Arab Republic
Egypt
Syria
Represented the United Arab Republic from 1958 to 1961 until the secession of Syria. Was considered a continuation of the previous Egypt national football team, which became its successor team. The team continued to be known as the United Arab Republic until 1970.
Russian Empire
Soviet Union
Represented Russian Empire from 1912 to 1923 until its transition into Soviet Union.
Soviet Union(officially Union of Soviet Socialist Republics)
CIS
Estonia Latvia Lithuania
Represented the Soviet Union from 1940 until its dissolution in 1991. This was considered a continuation of the team that had previously represented the Russian Empire. Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania had all had active football teams prior to their incorporation into the Soviet Union in 1940, and did not participate in the CIS team.
CIS
Russia
Armenia Azerbaijan Belarus Georgia Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Moldova Tajikistan Turkmenistan Ukraine Uzbekistan
Represented the Commonwealth of Independent States from January to June 1992; until the end of the UEFA Euro 1992 tournament.
Yugoslavia
FR Yugoslavia
Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia North Macedonia Slovenia
Represented Yugoslavia between 1920 and 1992, before the dissolution of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia into Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, North Macedonia and Slovenia
Serbia and Montenegro
Serbia
Montenegro Kosovo
Represented the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, known as Serbia and Montenegro after 2003, from 1992 until its dissolution into Serbia and Montenegro in 2006; the unified team still played the 2006 FIFA World Cup, because the dissolution process was only concluded one week before the start of the tournament with Montenegro's declaration of independence, following the referendum in May of that year. Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008, and its national team was accepted into UEFA and FIFA in 2016.
Netherlands Antilles
Curaçao
Aruba Bonaire Sint Maarten
Aruba became a separate autonomous territory in 1986 and was accepted into FIFA in 1988. The former team represented the Netherlands Antilles until the dissolution of the country in 2010. Formerly known as "Curaçao", this name was restored in March 2011 when the new constituent country of Curaçao was given the Netherlands Antilles' place in FIFA and CONCACAF. The teams representing the former Netherlands Antilles territories of Bonaire and Sint Maarten are full members of CONCACAF but not of FIFA. Two other former Netherlands Antilles territories (Saba and Sint Eustatius) have fielded national teams in unofficial friendly matches in the past, but neither has membership of FIFA or a continental federation.
Artsakh
None
None
Represented the Republic of Artsakh (formerly known as Nagorno-Karabakh Republic), a state with limited recognition which officially ceased to exist on January 1, 2024, after a military offensive by Azerbaijan. As of September 2025, the team still appears on the ConIFA rankings table.

References

  1. Additionally, 22 nations in Africa and Asia belong to the Union of Arab Football Associations (UAFA) in addition to thei
  2. Guyana and Suriname are independent countries, and French Guiana is an overseas department and region of France
  3. The FIFA-affiliated football teams that belong to non-UN members are: .mw- .mw- .mw- .mw- .mw- .mw- .mw- .mw- } 4 states
  4. "Biggest Global Sports"
    http://biggestglobalsports.com/worlds-biggest-sports/4580873435
  5. These are displayed in the main list in italics.
  6. "AFC and UAFA sign Memorandum of Understanding"
    https://www.the-afc.com/media/afc-and-uafa-sign-memorandum-of-understanding-25263
  7. "Members"
    http://www.conifa.org/en/members/
  8. "FIFA/UEFA suspend Russian clubs and national teams from all competitions"
    https://www.fifa.com/tournaments/mens/worldcup/qatar2022/media-releases/fifa-uefa-suspend-russian-clubs-and-national-teams-from-all-competitions
  9. "FIFA Statutes: July 2012 Edition"
    https://web.archive.org/web/20120802075510/http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/affederation/generic/01/66/54/21/fifastatutes2012e.pdf
  10. sic
    http://nonfifafootball.blogspot.com/2013/04/interview-6-april-2013-palau-football.html
  11. "England Player Honours - International Representative Teams"
    http://www.englandfootballonline.com/TeamHons/HonsRepTms.html
  12. RSSSF
    https://www.rsssf.org/tablesn/nauru2014.html
  13. "Abkhazia founds national football team"
    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/news/sport/34442.html
  14. "Nagorno Karabakh FA | ConIFA"
    https://web.archive.org/web/20140607100019/http://worldfootballcup.org/team/nagorno-karabakh-fa/
  15. wordpress.com
    https://conifaofficial.wordpress.com/somaliland/
  16. nonfifafootball.blogspot.co.uk
    http://nonfifafootball.blogspot.co.uk/2013/10/south-ossetia-make-international-bow-in.html
  17. www.ffpmr.md/
    http://ffpmr.md/turniry/
  18. RNZ
    https://www.rnz.co.nz/international/pacific-news/437764/niue-removed-as-associate-member-of-oceania-football
  19. "FIFA Statutes"
    https://web.archive.org/web/20160509164416/http://resources.fifa.com/mm/Document/AFFederation/Generic/02/78/29/07/FIFAStatutswebEN_Neutral.pdf
  20. fifa.com
    https://inside.fifa.com/associations/CZE
  21. fifa.com
    https://inside.fifa.com/associations/SVK
  22. The Prague Post
    http://www.praguepost.com/archivescontent/12198-world-cup-ends-on-belgian-note.html
  23. "Saarland 1950–1955"
    http://www.wsc.co.uk/the-archive/923-Europe/4367-saarland-1950-1955
  24. "Germany: When East and West became one"
    https://web.archive.org/web/20101125092332/http://www.fifa.com/worldfootball/news/newsid=1339057.html
  25. Football Association of Ireland: 75 years
  26. "The National Team Without a Nation: The Story of the CIS at Euro 92"
    http://www.futbolgrad.com/national-team-without-nation-cis/
  27. RSSSF
    https://www.rsssf.org/tablesi/iisabastatia.html
  28. "World Rankings"
    https://www.conifa.org/en/world-rankings/
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