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Top / Mon, 13 Jul 2026 Opta Analyst

France vs Spain Prediction: World Cup 2026 Match Preview

Can Les Bleus reach a third straight World Cup final or will the European champions beat them for a third straight time? We look ahead to this semi-final clash with our France vs Spain prediction and preview. France vs Spain: The Key InsightsThe Opta supercomputer’s pre-match projections give France a slight edge. Didier Deschamps will take charge of his 26th World Cup match on Tuesday, overtaking Helmut Schön of Germany for the outright record. France vs Spain Head-to-HeadThis will be just the second ever World Cup meeting between France and Spain.

Can Les Bleus reach a third straight World Cup final or will the European champions beat them for a third straight time? We look ahead to this semi-final clash with our France vs Spain prediction and preview.

France vs Spain: The Key Insights

The Opta supercomputer’s pre-match projections give France a slight edge. Les Bleus reached the final in 57.1% of simulations.

Didier Deschamps will take charge of his 26th World Cup match on Tuesday, overtaking Helmut Schön of Germany for the outright record.

Spain’s Luis de la Fuente has overseen the most World Cup and UEFA European Championship games without losing of any manager (13 – W12 D1).

Indomitable duo France and Spain, the two favourites for the 2026 World Cup, go head-to-head in a mouth-watering semi-final match-up at Dallas Stadium on Tuesday.

The Opta supercomputer’s latest projections make France the favourites to be crowned champions with a 34.6% probability, but they will have to overcome their closest rivals in the shape of Spain (23.8%) if they are to advance to the final against England or Argentina.

France made it six straight victories at this World Cup by beating Morocco 2-0 in the quarter-finals, and are now looking to become just the second European side to win seven in a row, after Italy across the 1934 and 1938 editions.

It will be their eighth appearance in the final four of the World Cup, with only Germany reaching this stage more often (12). Although France lost their first three in 1958, 1982 and 1986, they have progressed in each of the past four (1998, 2006, 2018 and 2022) and won the most recent three without conceding.

France now have an opportunity to emulate the feats of Germany (1982, 1986 and 1990) and Brazil (1994, 1998 and 2002) by reaching three consecutive World Cup finals.

Kylian Mbappé has been having another wonderful tournament, and should be fit to feature against Spain despite going off with an ankle issue against Morocco.

His eight goals in North America have put him level with Lionel Messi in the race for the Golden Boot and helped propel France to the semi-finals.

His all-time tally in the World Cup knockout stages now stands at 12 – the most of any player – but while he has scored in the round of 32 (2), round of 16 (5), quarter-final (1) and final (4), he has not found the net in his two prior semi-final appearances.

Mbappé has also been a major creative force for his country. His partnership with Ousmane Dembélé has seen them create 19 chances for one another (10 Mbappé to Dembélé, 9 Dembele to Mbappé).

Only three pairs of players on record (from 1966) have created 20+ chances for each other at the finals: Franz Beckenbauer and Wolfgang Overath (25), Rivaldo and Ronaldo (23), and Ángel Di María and Lionel Messi (21).

Spain have been impressive at stifling opposition attackers during this competition, though, with Charles De Ketelaere’s header in their 2-1 quarter-final victory over Belgium the only goal they have conceded.

The game looked to be heading for extra-time until Mikel Merino followed up his goal against Portugal in the last 16 by becoming the first player in World Cup history to score a winner in two knockout matches as a substitute. The only player to net in three straight substitute appearances at a single World Cup edition is Romelu Lukaku this year.

It is not just at this tournament that La Roja have been difficult to beat, either. Spain have lost just one of their 27 matches at major tournaments (W16 D10) since the start of the 2018 World Cup. They are unbeaten in 14 since a 2-1 loss to Japan at the 2022 World Cup, conceding just five goals and never more than one in a game (9 clean sheets).

That solidity has helped carry them to just their second World Cup semi-final, with their previous appearance coming when they went all the way in 2010. Across seven semi-final outings at all major tournaments, their only elimination came when they lost 4-2 on penalties after a 1-1 draw against Italy at Euro 2020.

Should they manage to overcome France, Spain will become the first European nation to win eight consecutive knockout games at major tournaments – surpassing the seven in a row for Italy from 1934-1938 and themselves from 2008-2012.

Neither side has any suspensions to content with, but France will be closely managing the fitness of William Saliba, Dayot Upamecano and Aurélien Tchouaméni – who has sat out their past two matches with a muscle injury.

Nico Williams will be hoping for more minutes after overcoming a thigh injury, while Yéremy Pino could return from the shoulder issue he sustained against Uruguay.

France vs Spain Head-to-Head

This will be just the second ever World Cup meeting between France and Spain. Their previous encounter was a last-16 clash back in 2006, when France came from behind and sealed a 3-1 victory with two goals in the final 10 minutes.

However, Spain have lost just two of their last 10 meetings with France in all competitions (W7 D1) and triumphed in each of the last two.

They were 2-1 victors in the Euro 2024 semi-finals, when Lamine Yamal and Dani Olmo overturned Randal Kolo Muani‘s opener. Yamal was also on target twice as Spain won a thrilling Nations League final-four clash with France 5-4 in June last year.

After Spain beat Belgium to set up the meeting with France, Yamal said: “There are two possibilities: either they reach three World Cup finals in a row, or we beat them three times. I don’t know what might happen, but we’re not afraid at all.”

France vs Spain Prediction

France came out on top inside 90 minutes in 43.9% of the Opta supercomputer’s 25,000 pre-match simulations, giving them a slight edge over Spain.

Spain still have a very solid win probability, emerging victorious in 29.0% of the projections in normal time, though, so Deschamps’ side cannot be considered clear favourites.

The chance of the match ending in a draw and going to extra-time stands at 27.1%.

France vs Spain Squads

France: Brice Samba, Mike Maignan, Robin Risser, Malo Gusto, Lucas Digne, Dayot Upamecano, Jules Koundé, Ibrahima Konaté, William Saliba, Théo Hernández, Lucas Hernández, Maxence Lacroix, Manu Koné, Aurélien Tchouaméni, Michael Olise, N’Golo Kanté, Adrien Rabiot, Warren Zaïre-Emery, Rayan Cherki, Maghnes Akliouche, Ousmane Dembélé, Marcus Thuram, Kylian Mbappé, Bradley Barcola, Désiré Doué, Jean-Philippe Mateta.

Spain: David Raya, Joan García, Unai Simón, Marc Pubill, Alejandro Grimaldo, Eric García, Pedro Porro, Aymeric Laporte, Pau Cubarsí, Marc Cucurella, Marcos Llorente, Mikel Merino, Fabián Ruiz, Gavi, Dani Olmo, Yéremy Pino, Álex Baena, Rodri, Martín Zubimendi, Pedri, Ferran Torres, Nico Williams, Lamine Yamal, Mikel Oyarzabal, Víctor Muñoz, Borja Iglesias.

France vs Spain Predicted Lineups

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