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How the Champions League works: the new format explained

By KickoffHQ Editorial · 29 June 2026

How the Champions League works: the new format explained

Europe's elite club competition looks very different from the old eight-groups-of-four. The Champions League now runs on a single league phase, and here's exactly how a club gets from the first whistle to the final.

36 teams, one big table

The competition expanded from 32 to 36 teams. Instead of separate mini-groups, every club sits in one combined league table.

The league phase: eight games

Each team plays eight matches — four at home, four away — against eight different opponents. The opponents are drawn from four seeding pots, so every club faces two teams from each pot, mixing giants and underdogs. Crucially, you do not play the same team twice.

All results feed into the single 36-team table.

How you qualify from the league phase

When the eight games are done, the table decides everything:

  • 1st–8th go straight through to the Round of 16.
  • 9th–24th enter a two-legged knockout play-off to claim the remaining eight Round-of-16 places.
  • 25th–36th are eliminated — there's no longer a drop into the Europa League.

So finishing in the top eight earns a valuable rest while everyone else fights through an extra round.

The knockout rounds

From the Round of 16 onward it's the familiar two-legged knockout: Round of 16, quarter-finals and semi-finals over home and away legs, then a single-match final at a neutral venue. Away goals no longer count — if a tie is level after both legs, it goes to extra time and, if needed, penalties.

Why UEFA changed it

The aim was more big games earlier: a varied eight-match schedule means more meetings between top clubs in the opening phase, fewer dead rubbers, and a league table that keeps stakes high to the final round. For fans it means almost every matchday matters.

Follow the latest Champions League fixtures, results and tables in our tournaments section when the competition is in season.

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