The northern hemisphere’s greatest rugby tournament prepares for an epic conclusion

The Men’s Six Nations 2026 is set for a blockbuster finale with three teams still in contention for the Six Nations trophy.

Scotland’s epic 50-40 victory over France has set up a tantalising Super Saturday, as Gregor Townsend’s men evaporated Les Bleus’ Grand Slam hopes, and gave themselves a fighting chance of a first ever title in the Six Nations era.

France and Scotland are level on points but France top the table thanks to their vastly superior points difference, meaning the championship remains in their hands. To win the 2026 Six Nations, Scotland not only need to beat Ireland in this weekend’s Triple Crown decider (something they haven’t done since 2017) but also better France’s result against England. In other words, Scottish fans might find themselves in the unlikely position of supporting the Auld Enemy on Saturday night.

Ireland are also still in with a shout of lifting the trophy, if they beat Scotland and England win in Paris.

At the other end of the table, Italy lifted themselves out of Wooden Spoon contention with their first ever victory over England. Steve Borthwick’s team could even finish bottom of the table, though – with Wales in need of a 100-point points difference swing to overhaul their rivals – it’s highly unlikely. Indeed, even if Steve Tandy’s team end their epic Six Nations losing streak against the Azzurri, it’s more than probable they’ll find themselves propping up the table for a third successive year.

Read more: How to watch Six Nations 2026: broadcasters, TV and streaming guide

This article will tell you everything you need to know about the men’s Six Nations 2026 ahead of Super Saturday, including results, fixtures, a recap of the 2025 tournament, squads and details of the championship’s previous winners. You can also check out the latest team news in our guides to the England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Wales squads.


Six Nations 2026: key information

Dates: Thursday 5 February – Saturday 14 March 2026

Participating teams: England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland, Wales

UK TV coverage: The BBC and ITV shared coverage in 2025, and will continue to do so thanks to a new TV deal that kicks off in 2026. Every England game is available on ITV.


Six Nations 2026 results

Round 1

Thursday 5 February

  • France 36 v 14 Ireland
    Stade de France

Saturday 7 February

  • Italy 18 v 15 Scotland
    Stadio Olimpico, Rome
  • England 48 v 7 Wales
    Allianz Stadium, Twickenham

Round 2

Saturday 14 February

  • Ireland 20 v 13 Italy
    Aviva Stadium, Dublin
  • Scotland 31 v 20 England
    Scottish Gas Murrayfield, Edinburgh

Sunday 15 February

  • Wales 12 v 54 France
    Principality Stadium, Cardiff

Round 3

Saturday 21 February

  • England 21 v 42 Ireland
    Allianz Stadium, Twickenham
  • Wales 23 v 26 Scotland
    Principality Stadium, Cardiff

Sunday 22 February

  • France 33 v 8 Italy
    Stade Pierre Mauroy, Lille

Round 4

Friday 6 March

  • Ireland 27 v 17 Wales
    Aviva Stadium, Dublin

Read more: Why Ireland and Wales no longer clash in their traditional red and green

Saturday 7 March

  • Scotland 50 v 40 France
    Scottish Gas Murrayfield, Edinburgh
  • Italy 23 v 18 England
    Stadio Olimpico, Rome

Six Nations 2026 fixtures

Tommaso Menoncello scoring a try for Italy during the 2026 Six Nations match against England.

Italy secured their first ever win over England on Saturday (Silvia Lore/Federugby via Getty Images)

(UK Broadcaster in brackets)

Round 5

Saturday 14 March

  • Ireland v Scotland (ITV)
    Aviva Stadium, Dublin
  • Wales v Italy (BBC)
    Principality Stadium, Cardiff
  • France v England (ITV)
    Stade de France

READ MORE: Six Nations 2026 fixtures: A comprehensive guide including kick-off times and UK broadcaster information


Six Nations squads: All six squads for 2026 tournament

England Six Nations 2026 squad

Forwards (20): Ollie Chessum (Leicester Tigers), Arthur Clark (Gloucester Rugby), Alex Coles (Northampton Saints), Luke Cowan-Dickie (Sale Sharks), Chandler Cunningham-South (Harlequins), Tom Curry (Sale Sharks), Theo Dan (Saracens), Trevor Davison (Northampton Saints), Ben Earl (Saracens), Ellis Genge (Bristol Bears), Jamie George (Saracens), Joe Heyes (Leicester Tigers), Maro Itoje (Saracens, captain), Jack Kenningham (Harlequins), Emmanuel Iyogun (Northampton Saints), George Kloska (Bristol Bears), Guy Pepper (Bath Rugby), Henry Pollock (Northampton Saints), Bevan Rodd (Sale Sharks), Sam Underhill (Bath Rugby)

Backs (16): Henry Arundell (Bath Rugby), Seb Atkinson (Gloucester Rugby), Elliot Daly (Saracens), Fraser Dingwall (Northampton Saints), George Ford (Sale Sharks), Tommy Freeman (Northampton Saints), George Furbank (Northampton Saints), Cadan Murley (Harlequins), Raffi Quirke (Sale Sharks), Tom Roebuck (Sale Sharks), Henry Slade (Exeter Chiefs), Marcus Smith (Harlequins), Fin Smith (Northampton Saints), Ben Spencer (Bath Rugby), Freddie Steward (Leicester Tigers), Jack van Poortvliet (Leicester Tigers)

France Six Nations 2026 squad

Forwards (25): Dorian Aldegheri (Toulouse), Uini Atonio (La Rochelle), Hugo Auradou (Pau), Cyril Baille (Toulouse), Paul Boudehent (La Rochelle), François Cros (Toulouse), Alexandre Fischer (Bayonne), Thibaud Flament (Toulouse), Jean-Baptiste Gros (Toulon), Mickaël Guillard (Lyon), Oscar Jegou (La Rochelle), Anthony Jelonch (Toulouse), Maxime Lamothe (Bordeaux Bègles), Julien Marchand (Toulouse), Temo Matiu (Bordeaux Bègles), Peato Mauvaka (Toulouse), Emmanuel Meafou (Toulouse), Régis Montagne (Clermont-Auvergne), Rodrigue Neti (Toulouse), Lenni Nouchi (Montpellier), Charles Ollivon (Toulon), Dany Priso (Toulon), Thomas Staniforth (Castres), Tevita Tatafu (Bayonne), Cameron Woki (Bordeaux Bègles)

Backs (17): Grégoire Arfeuil (Pau), Théo Attissogbe (Pau), Louis Bielle-Biarrey (Bordeaux Bègles), Fabien Brau-Boirie (Pau), Romain Buros (Bordeaux Bègles), Thibault Daubagna (Pau), Nicolas Depoortere (Bordeaux Bègles), Gaël Dréan (Toulon), Antoine Dupont (Toulouse, captain), Kalvin Gourgues (Toulouse), Aaron Grandidier Nkanang (Pau), Matthieu Jalibert (Bordeaux Bègles), Yoram Moefana (Bordeaux Bègles), Noah Nene (Stade Français), Thomas Ramos (Stade Toulousain), Baptiste Serin (RC Toulon), Ugo Seunes (Racing 92)

Ireland Six Nations 2026 squad

Forwards (20): Tom Ahern (Munster), Finlay Bealham (Connacht), Tadhg Beirne (Munster), Jack Boyle (Leinster), Thomas Clarkson (Leinster), Jack Conan (Leinster), Caelan Doris (Leinster, captain), Edwin Edogbo (Munster), Tadhg Furlong (Leinster), Rónan Kelleher (Leinster), Jeremy Loughman (Munster), Joe McCarthy (Leinster), Michael Milne (Munster), Tom O’Toole (Ulster), Cian Prendergast (Connacht), James Ryan (Leinster), Dan Sheehan (Leinster), Tom Stewart (Ulster), Nick Timoney (Ulster), Josh van der Flier (Leinster)

Backs (18): Bundee Aki (Connacht), Robert Baloucoune (Ulster), Craig Casey (Munster), Jack Crowley (Munster), Nathan Doak (Ulster), Tom Farrell (Munster), Ciaran Frawley (Leinster), Jamison Gibson-Park (Leinster), Robbie Henshaw (Leinster), Hugo Keenan (Leinster), Stuart McCloskey (Ulster), Jimmy O’Brien (Leinster), Tommy O’Brien (Leinster), Jamie Osborne (Leinster), Sam Prendergast (Leinster), Garry Ringrose (Leinster), Jacob Stockdale (Ulster)

Italy Six Nations 2026 squad

Forwards (18): Tommaso Di Bartolomeo (Zebre Parma), Lorenzo Cannone (Benetton Rugby), Niccolò Cannone (Benetton Rugby), Pablo Dimcheff (Colomiers Rugby), Riccardo Favretto (Benetton Rugby), Simone Ferrari (Benetton Rugby), Danilo Fischetti (Northampton Saints), Muhamed Hasa (Zebre Parma), Alessandro Izekor (Benetton Rugby), Michele Lamaro (Benetton Rugby), Samuele Locatelli (Zebre Parma), Giacomo Nicotera (Stade Français), David Odiase (Zebre Parma), Marco Riccioni (Saracens), Federico Ruzza (Benetton Rugby), Mirco Spagnolo (Benetton Rugby), Andrea Zambonin (Exeter Chiefs), Manuel Zuliani (Benetton Rugby)

Backs (15): Juan Ignacio Brex (Benetton Rugby), Giacomo Da Re (Zebre Parma), Alessandro Fusco (Zebre Parma), Matt Gallagher (Benetton Rugby), Paolo Garbisi (Toulon), Monty Ioane (Lyon), Louis Lynagh (Benetton Rugby), Leonardo Marin (Benetton Rugby), Damiano Mazza (Zebre Parma), Tommaso Menoncello (Benetton Rugby), Paolo Odogwu (Benetton Rugby), Martin Page-Relo (Lyon), Lorenzo Pani (Zebre Parma), Edoardo Todaro (Northampton Saints), Stephen Varney (Exeter Chiefs)

Scotland Six Nations 2026 squad

Forwards (24): Ewan Ashman (Edinburgh Rugby), Josh Bayliss (Bath Rugby), Magnus Bradbury (Edinburgh Rugby), Gregor Brown (Glasgow Warriors), Dave Cherry (Vannes), Scott Cummings (Glasgow Warriors), Alex Craig (Glasgow Warriors), Rory Darge (Glasgow Warriors), Jack Dempsey (Glasgow Warriors), Freddy Douglas (Edinburgh Rugby), Matt Fagerson (Glasgow Warriors), Zander Fagerson (Glasgow Warriors), Grant Gilchrist (Edinburgh Rugby), Jonny Gray (Union Bordeaux Bègles), Gregor Hiddleston (Glasgow Warriors), Nathan McBeth (Glasgow Warriors), Elliot Millar Mills (Northampton Saints), D’arcy Rae (Edinburgh Rugby), Pierre Schoeman (Edinburgh Rugby), Seb Stephen (Glasgow Warriors), Rory Sutherland (Glasgow Warriors), George Turner (Harlequins), Murphy Walker (Glasgow Warriors), Max Williamson (Glasgow Warriors)

Backs (17): Fergus Burke (Saracens), Darcy Graham (Edinburgh Rugby), Adam Hastings (Glasgow Warriors), George Horne (Glasgow Warriors), Rory Hutchinson (Northampton Saints), Huw Jones (Glasgow Warriors), Tom Jordan (Bristol Bears), Blair Kinghorn (Toulouse), Stafford McDowall (Glasgow Warriors), Finn Russell (Bath Rugby), Kyle Rowe (Glasgow Warriors), Ollie Smith (Glasgow Warriors), Kyle Steyn (Glasgow Warriors), Sione Tuipulotu (Glasgow Warriors), Duhan van der Merwe (Edinburgh Rugby), Ben White (Toulon), Gus Warr (Sale Sharks)

Wales Six Nations 2026 squad

Forwards (21): Keiron Assiratti (Cardiff), Adam Beard (Montpellier), Liam Belcher (Cardiff), James Botham (Cardiff), Rhys Carre (Saracens), Ben Carter (Dragons), Olly Cracknell (Leicester), Harri Deaves (Ospreys), Ryan Elias (Scarlets), Tomas Francis (Provence), Archie Griffin (Bath), Dafydd Jenkins (Exeter), Dewi Lake (Ospreys, capt), Alex Mann (Cardiff), Josh Macleod (Scarlets), Nicky Smith (Leicester), Gareth Thomas (Ospreys), Freddie Thomas (Gloucester), Aaron Wainwright (Dragons), Sam Wainwright (Scarlets), Ryan Woodman (Dragons)

Backs (18): Josh Adams (Cardiff), Sam Costelow (Scarlets), Dan Edwards (Ospreys), Jarrod Evans (Harlequins), Mason Grady (Cardiff), Kieran Hardy (Ospreys), Gabriel Hamer-Webb (Leicester), Joe Hawkins (Scarlets), Louie Hennessey (Bath), Eddie James (Scarlets), Ellis Mee (Scarlets), Reuben Morgan-Williams (Ospreys), Blair Murray (Scarlets), Louis Rees-Zammit (Bristol Bears), Tom Rogers (Scarlets), Ben Thomas (Cardiff), Owen Watkin (Ospreys), Tomos Williams (Gloucester)


Six Nations overview

Teams: England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland, Wales

The backstory: The tournament began as the Home Nations Championship in 1883, contested between England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. France joined in 1910 to make it the Five Nations, were suspended in 1932, and subsequently readmitted in 1947 when the Five Nations resumed after the Second World War. The current Six Nations iteration kicked off in 2000 with the arrival of Italy.

First title: England (England also won the first-ever Five Nations and Six Nations titles)

Most titles: England and Wales have both won 39 titles. (England have 29 outright wins with 10 shared; Wales have 28 outright wins with 11 shared). We have a full list of previous winners of the championship in all its different forms dating back to 1883.


Six Nations 2025 recap and results

Winners: France

Final standings:

  1. France (21 points)
  2. England (20 points)
  3. Ireland (19 points)
  4. Scotland (11 points)
  5. Italy (5 points)
  6. Wales (3 points)

England had their best tournament since they won the title in 2020, finishing a single point behind France after a thumping win over Wales. Reigning champions Ireland won the Triple Crown but had to make to do with third place having lost to France in Dublin.

In the bottom half of the table, Scotland managed two wins (over Italy and Wales), but were left rueing their narrow Calcutta Cup defeat to England in round 3. Italy failed to match last year’s best-ever return of two wins and a draw, but that was still enough to finish ahead of Wales, who had another dismal campaign and “retained” the Wooden Spoon.

Round 1

Friday 31 January 2025

  • France 43 – 0 Wales
    Stade de France, Paris

Saturday 1 February 2025

  • Scotland 31 – 19 Italy
    Murrayfield, Edinburgh
  • Ireland 27 – 22 England
    Aviva Stadium, Dublin

Round 2

Saturday 8 February 2025

  • Italy 22 – 15 Wales
    Stadio Olimpico, Rome
  • England 26 – 25 France
    Twickenham Stadium, London

Sunday 9 February 2025

  • Scotland 18 – 32 Ireland
    Murrayfield, Edinburgh

Round 3

Saturday 22 February 2025

  • Wales 18-27 Ireland
    Principality Stadium, Cardiff
  • England 16-15 Scotland
    Twickenham Stadium, London

Sunday 23 February

  • Italy 24-73 France
    Stadio Olimpico, Rome

Round 4

Saturday 8 March 2025

  • Ireland 27-42 France
    Aviva Stadium, Dublin
  • Scotland 35-29 Wales
    Murrayfield, Edinburgh 

Sunday 9 March 2025

  • England 47-24 Italy
    Allianz Stadium, Twickenham

Round 5

Saturday 15 March 2025

  • Italy 17-22 Ireland
    Stadio Olimpico, Rome
  • Wales 14-68 England
    Principality Stadium, Cardiff
  • France 35-16 Scotland
    Stade de France, Paris

Previous Six Nations winners

France’s Nolann Le Garrec holds the Six Nations trophy, in front of teammates, following the team's victory over Scotland

France lifted the Six Nations 2025 trophy (Warren Little/Getty Images)

Here’s every winner of the Six Nations title since Italy joined the tournament in 2000.

2000 – England

2001 – England

2002 – France (Grand Slam)

2003 – England (Grand Slam)

2004 – France (Grand Slam)

2005 – Wales (Grand Slam)

2006 – France

2007 – France

2008 – Wales (Grand Slam)

2009 – Ireland (Grand Slam)

2010 – France (Grand Slam)

2011 – England

2012 – Wales (Grand Slam)

2013 – Wales

2014 – Ireland

2015 – Ireland

2016 – England (Grand Slam)

2017 – England

2018 – Ireland (Grand Slam)

2019 – Wales (Grand Slam)

2020 – England

2021 – Wales

2022 – France (Grand Slam)

2023 – Ireland (Grand Slam)

2024 – Ireland

2025 – France


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