There are eight groups in the FIFA Club World Cup under the current 32-team format. Simple number. Eight.

But that number only makes proper sense when you remember the tournament changed shape. The newer FIFA Club World Cup is built more like the international World Cup people already understand, with a group stage first and then knockout football after that. FIFA’s own format says the group stage has eight groups of four teams, and the top two from each group move on. That’s the clean version.

Why There Are Eight Groups Now

The reason is the 32-team format. Once FIFA expanded the Club World Cup, it needed a structure that didn’t feel like a random festival of one-off games. So 32 clubs get split into eight groups. Each group has four clubs. That gives every team three group matches before the knockout rounds start.

I like this format more than the old tiny Club World Cup, honestly. The old version could feel over before you had even worked out who was playing. This one breathes a bit. You get storylines. You get upset chances. You get one big club suddenly needing a result in the third group match, which is usually where football gets fun.

The Basic Group Setup

Think of it like this.

• Eight groups total, named from Group A to Group H, so it’s easy to follow without needing a spreadsheet open.

• Four teams sit in each group, which feels just crowded enough without becoming a mess.

• Every team plays three group games. After that, excuses start getting thin.

• The top two teams from each group go into the knockout stage, and the rest go home early.

That means 16 teams qualify from the group stage. Then the tournament moves into the round of 16. From there, it’s knockout football. Lose and you’re out. No long table. No second chance hidden somewhere.

How The Groups Actually Work

In each group, teams play each other once. A win gives three points. A draw gives one. A loss gives nothing, which still feels harsh when a team has played well for 80 minutes and then conceded from one stupid corner.

And because there are four teams in each group, the math stays neat. Six matches per group. Multiply that by eight groups and you get 48 group-stage matches. That’s a lot of football, but not in a bad way. It gives the tournament enough weight.

Raj had the same confusion during the 2025 tournament. He was checking scores on his phone while eating poha from a steel plate, and he kept asking why some teams had played twice while others had one match left. Once he wrote “8 groups, 4 teams each” on a sticky note, he stopped reopening the same five tabs every morning.

Why Four Teams Per Group Works

Four teams is the sweet spot. Three teams can get weird because one team is always waiting. Five teams drag things out. Four gives you enough results to judge teams properly, but it doesn’t turn the group stage into homework.

This works well if you’re a casual fan too. You don’t need to track twenty rules. Just look at the table. Top two good. Bottom two bad. Done.

What Happens After The Groups

Once the eight groups are finished, two teams from each group qualify. So Group A sends two. Group B sends two. Same all the way to Group H.

Then the serious part starts.

The round of 16 has 16 clubs. Then quarter-finals. Then semi-finals. Then the final. The Club World Cup does not keep all 32 teams around forever, which is good, because a bloated tournament gets tiring fast. At some point, you want pressure. You want a match that actually bites.

Is It Always Eight Groups?

For the expanded FIFA Club World Cup format, yes, the answer is eight groups. But if you’re reading about older editions, you’ll see different structures because the tournament used to be much smaller. That’s where confusion comes from. People search the same question and land on old formats, old team counts, and old match paths.

So use the current version as your anchor. Eight groups. Four teams in each. Thirty-two clubs overall.

The Easy Way To Remember It

Don’t overthink the format. The FIFA Club World Cup has eight groups because 32 teams split neatly into groups of four. It’s tidy. It’s familiar. And for once, FIFA picked a format that most fans can understand without needing a flowchart taped to the wall.