UEFA Futsal Championship

UEFA Futsal Championship
Organiser(s)UEFA
Founded1996
RegionEurope
Teams46 (qualifiers)
16 (finals)
Qualifier forFutsal Finalissima
Current champions Spain
(8th title)
Most championships Spain
(8 titles)
Websiteuefa.com/futsaleuro
UEFA Futsal Euro 2026

The UEFA European Futsal Championship[1] is the main futsal competition of the men's national futsal teams governed by UEFA (the Union of European Football Associations).

History

The first tournament was held in Spain in 1996 and featured only six teams. The tournament was expanded to eight teams in 1999 and held every two years, and further to 12 teams in 2010.

After 2018, the tournament was expanded to 16 teams and held every four years, to avoid leap years when the FIFA Futsal World Cup is being played. The first 16-team tournament was held in 2022 in the Netherlands.[2]

Qualification

  1. 1996 UEFA Futsal Championship qualifying (Link)
  2. 1999 UEFA Futsal Championship qualifying (Link)
  3. 2001 UEFA Futsal Championship qualifying (Link)
  4. 2003 UEFA Futsal Championship qualifying (Link)
  5. 2005 UEFA Futsal Championship qualifying (Link)
  6. 2007 UEFA Futsal Championship qualifying (Link)
  7. 2010 UEFA Futsal Championship qualifying
  8. UEFA Futsal Euro 2012 qualifying
  9. UEFA Futsal Euro 2014 qualifying
  10. UEFA Futsal Euro 2016 qualifying
  11. UEFA Futsal Euro 2018 qualifying
  12. UEFA Futsal Euro 2022 qualifying
  13. UEFA Futsal Euro 2026 qualifying

Editions

# Year Host Final Third place match Teams
Champions Score Runners-up Third place Score Fourth place
1 1996
Details
Spain
Spain

Spain
5–3
Russia

Belgium
3–2 (a.e.t.)
Italy
6 (18)
2 1999
Details
Spain
Spain

Russia
3–3 (a.e.t.)
4–2 (p)

Spain

Italy
3–0
Netherlands
8 (25)
3 2001
Details
Russia
Russia

Spain
2–1 (a.e.t.)
Ukraine

Russia
2–1 (a.e.t.)
Italy
8 (26)
4 2003
Details
Italy
Italy

Italy
1–0
Ukraine

Czech Republic
By Points
Spain
8 (29)
5 2005
Details
Czech Republic
Czech Republic

Spain
2–1
Russia

Italy
3–1
Ukraine
8 (34)
6 2007
Details
Portugal
Portugal

Spain
3–1
Italy

Russia
3–2
Portugal
8 (34)
7 2010
Details
Hungary
Hungary

Spain
4–2
Portugal

Czech Republic
5–3
Azerbaijan
12 (39)
8 2012
Details
Croatia
Croatia

Spain
3–1 (a.e.t.)
Russia

Italy
3–1
Croatia
12 (43)
9 2014
Details
Belgium
Belgium

Italy
3–1
Russia

Spain
8–4
Portugal
12 (45)
10 2016
Details
Serbia
Serbia

Spain
7–3
Russia

Kazakhstan
5–2
Serbia
12 (47)
11 2018
Details
Slovenia
Slovenia

Portugal
3–2 (a.e.t.)
Spain

Russia
1–0
Kazakhstan
12 (47)
12 2022
Details
Netherlands
Netherlands

Portugal
4–2
Russia

Spain
4–1
Ukraine
16 (50)
13 2026
Details
Latvia Lithuania Slovenia
Latvia / Lithuania / Slovenia

Spain
5–3
Portugal

Croatia
5–5 (6–5 p)
France
16 (50)

Debut of teams

Trophy
Year Debuting teams Successor teams
Teams No. CT
1996  Belgium,  Italy,  Netherlands,  Russia,  Spain,  Ukraine 6 6
1999  Croatia,  Portugal,  Yugoslavia 3 9
2001  Czech Republic,  Poland 2 11
2003  Slovenia 1 12
2005  Hungary 1 13
2007  Romania 1 14  Serbia
2010  Azerbaijan,  Belarus 2 16
2012  Turkey 1 17
2014 0 17
2016  Kazakhstan 1 18
2018  France 1 19
2022  Bosnia and Herzegovina,  Finland,  Georgia,  Slovakia 4 23
2026  Armenia,  Latvia,  Lithuania 3 26

Performance by nations

Team Champions Runners-up Third-place Fourth-place Semi-finalists Total
 Spain 8 (1996*, 2001, 2005, 2007, 2010, 2012, 2016, 2026) 2 (1999*, 2018) 2 (2014, 2022) 1 (2003) 13
 Portugal 2 (2018, 2022) 2 (2010, 2026) 2 (2007*, 2014) 6
 Italy 2 (2003*, 2014) 1 (2007) 3 (1999, 2005, 2012) 2 (1996, 2001) 8
 Russia 1 (1999) 6 (1996, 2005, 2012, 2014, 2016, 2022) 3 (2001*, 2007, 2018) 10
 Ukraine 2 (2001, 2003) 2 (2005, 2022) 4
 Croatia 1 (2026) 1 (2012*) 2
 Kazakhstan 1 (2016) 1 (2018) 2
 Czech Republic 1 (2010) 1 (2003) 2
 Belgium 1 (1996) 1
 Netherlands 1 (1999) 1
 Azerbaijan 1 (2010) 1
 Serbia 1 (2016*) 1
 France 1 (2026) 1
* = hosts

Comprehensive team results by tournament

Legend
  • 1st – Champions
  • 2nd – Runners-up
  • 3rd – Third place
  • 4th – Fourth place
  • SF – Semi-finalists
  • 5th–8th – Fifth to Eighth place
  • 9th–12th – Ninth to Twelfth place
  • Q – Qualified for upcoming tournament
  •  ••  — Qualified but withdrew
  •  •  — Did not qualify
  •  ×  — Did not enter
  •  ×  – Withdrew from the European Championship / Banned / Entry not accepted by FIFA
  • — Country not affiliated to UEFA at that time
  • — Country did not exist or national team was inactive
  •    — Hosts
Team 1996
Spain
(6)
1999
Spain
(8)
2001
Russia
(8)
2003
Italy
(8)
2005
Czech Republic
(8)
2007
Portugal
(8)
2010
Hungary
(12)
2012
Croatia
(12)
2014
Belgium
(12)
2016
Serbia
(12)
2018
Slovenia
(12)
2022
Netherlands
(16)
2026
Latvia
Lithuania
Slovenia
(16)
Years
 Armenia × × × QF 1
 Azerbaijan 4th 10th 9th 8th 7th 9th 6
 Belarus 9th 12th 2
 Belgium 3rd 8th 7th 9th 10th QF 6
 Bosnia and Herzegovina × 16th 1
 Croatia 5th 5th 4th 8th 9th 11th 3rd 7
 Czech Republic 6th SF 5th 8th 3rd 9th 11th 11th 14th 9
 Finland × 7th 1
 France × 10th 4th 2
 Georgia 6th 15th 2
 Hungary 5th 9th 10th 9th 4
 Italy 4th 3rd 4th 1st 3rd 2nd 5th 3rd 1st 5th 9th 14th QF 13
 Kazakhstan 3rd 4th 5th 3
 Latvia × 11th 1
 Lithuania × 13th 1
 Netherlands 6th 4th 7th 5th 12th 10th 6
 Poland 8th 11th 15th 16th 4
 Portugal 6th 5th 5th 4th 2nd 5th 4th 7th 1st 1st 2nd 11
 Romania × × × × 6th 7th 6th 12th 4
 Russia 2nd 1st 3rd 6th 2nd 3rd 5th 2nd 2nd 2nd 3rd 2nd × 12
 Serbia 5th 5th 6th 4th 8th 12th 6 (7)[3]
 Slovakia 8th 1
 Slovenia 8th 9th 11th 7th 12th 5th 13th 10th 8
 Spain 1st 2nd 1st SF 1st 1st 1st 1st 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd 1st 13
 Turkey × × × × × × 12th 1
 Ukraine 5th 2nd 2nd 4th 7th 5th 8th 5th 6th 6th 4th QF 12
 Yugoslavia 7th 1 (7)[3]

Summary (1996–2026)

As of UEFA Futsal Euro 2026
Rank Team Part M W D L GF GA GD Points
1  Spain 13 65 49 11 5 254 102 +152 158
2  Russia 12 56 34 7 15 178 114 +64 109
3  Italy 13 54 30 10 14 154 99 +55 100
4  Portugal 11 47 26 7 14 153 117 +36 85
5  Ukraine 12 46 16 6 24 123 119 +4 54
6  Serbia 7 23 8 5 10 54 66 –12 29
7  Croatia 7 24 7 7 10 54 69 –15 28
8  Kazakhstan 3 14 7 3 4 49 34 +15 24
9  Azerbaijan 6 18 6 3 9 56 72 –16 21
10  Czech Republic 9 27 5 4 18 74 123 –49 19
11  France 2 8 3 3 2 27 23 +4 12
12  Netherlands 6 19 3 3 13 39 71 –32 12
13  Slovenia 8 21 3 3 15 44 79 –35 12
14  Belgium 6 18 3 3 12 30 65 –35 12
15  Romania 4 11 3 0 8 25 40 –15 9
16  Armenia 1 4 2 1 1 10 11 -1 7
17  Georgia 2 7 2 1 4 9 23 –15 7
18  Finland 1 4 1 1 2 9 13 –4 4
19  Slovakia 1 4 1 1 2 9 17 –8 4
20  Belarus 2 5 1 1 3 9 22 –14 4
21  Hungary 4 10 1 1 8 23 43 –20 4
22  Latvia 1 3 1 0 2 5 9 –4 3
23  Lithuania 1 3 0 2 1 7 10 –3 2
24  Poland 4 11 0 2 9 16 45 –29 2
25  Bosnia and Herzegovina 1 3 0 0 3 4 11 –7 0
26  Turkey 1 2 0 0 2 1 8 –7 0

Medals (1996–2026)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Spain82212
2 Portugal2204
3 Italy2136
4 Russia16310
5 Ukraine0202
6 Czech Republic0022
7 Belgium0011
 Croatia0011
 Kazakhstan0011
Totals (9 entries)13131339

FIFA Futsal World Cup qualifiers

Legend
  • 1st – Champions
  • 2nd – Runners-up
  • 3rd – Third place
  • 4th – Fourth place
  • QF – Quarterfinals
  • R2 – Round 2 (1989–2008, second group stage, top 8; 2012–present: knockout round of 16)
  • R1 – Round 1
  •      – Hosts
  •    – Not an UEFA member
  • Q – Qualified for upcoming tournament
Team Netherlands
1989
Hong Kong
1992
Spain
1996
Guatemala
2000
Chinese Taipei
2004
Brazil
2008
Thailand
2012
Colombia
2016
Lithuania
2021
Uzbekistan
2024
2028 Total
 Azerbaijan QF 1
 Belgium 4th R2 R2 3
 Croatia R2 1
 Czech Republic R2 R1 R2 R2 4
 Denmark R1 1
 France 4th 1
 Hungary R1 1
 Italy R2 R1 R2 2nd 3rd 3rd R2 7
 Kazakhstan R2 4th QF 3
 Lithuania R1 1
 Netherlands 2nd R2 R2 R2 R2 5
 Poland R2 1
 Portugal 3rd R2 R1 QF 4th 1st R2 7
 Russia R1 3rd 4th 4th QF 2nd QF 7
 Serbia R2 R2 2
 Spain R1 3rd 2nd 1st 1st 2nd 2nd QF QF R2 10
 Ukraine 4th R2 R2 QF R2 3rd 6

See also

References

  1. ^ "Regulations of the UEFA European Futsal Championship 2020-22" (PDF). UEFA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 November 2019.
  2. ^ "UEFA to revamp and expand futsal competitions". UEFA. 4 April 2017.
  3. ^ a b The Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia broke up in 1991 all the nations that formed this country now compete separately. FIFA considers Serbia as the successor team of Yugoslavia.