The main 2014 World Cup qualifying draw took place in Rio on Saturday, July 30.
Click on any of the following links to see the draw in full.
The qualifying process for the 2014 World Cup began on June 15, 2011 when minnows Montserrat hosted Belize in Couva in the CONCACAF region.
A goal from Deon McCauley of Raymond Gentle-City Boys United in the 24th minute was the first in qualifying - and he went on to net a hat-trick too.
EUROPE: 13 places
• European qualifying home page
Qualifying for 2014 follows exactly the same format as for 2010. There are eight groups of six teams and one group of five.
Each group winner qualifies automatically, with the eight best runners-up facing a play-off to qualify. The record of the team finishing in sixth place in groups 1-8 will be discounted to determine the best runners-up.
The qualifiers began in September 2012 and run through to October 2013.
• Click here for the next fixtures
• Click here for group fixtures, results and standings
SOUTH AMERICA: 4.5 places
• South American qualifying home page
Brazil qualify automatically as hosts, which means only nine nations will take part. As in recent qualifying competitions, all teams play each other home and away with the top four nations making it to the finals. The fifth-placed team will have to play an inter-continental play-off.
The qualifiers began in October 2011 and run through to September 2013.
• Current CONMEBOL qualifying table
CONCACAF: 3.5 places
• Concacaf qualifying home page
A somewhat modified, but still convoluted, system for 2014. The main seeds, including USA and Mexico, enter in Round Three.
Round One: Ties completed by July 17. Ten bottom ranked nations playing two-legged ties.
Round Two: 24 teams drawn into six groups of four teams. Played September 2 to November 15, 2011. Group winners advance to the Round Three.
Round Three: 12 teams drawn into three groups of four teams. Played June 8 to October 16, 2012. Top two teams advance to Round Four.
Round Four: One group of six teams. Played from February 6 to October 15, 2013. Top three teams qualify. Fourth placed team makes the intercontinental play-off.
AFRICA 5 places
• African qualifying home page
A much-changed system in Africa, with the final round essentially taking the format of five play-off ties.
Round One: 12 home-and-away series. Played November 11-15, 2011.
Round Two: Ten groups of four teams. Played June 1, 2012 to September 10, 2013. The group winners advance to Round Three.
Round Three: Five two-legged ties. Played October 11-15 and November 15-19, 2013. Winners qualify for the finals.
ASIA 4.5 places
This follows the same format as for 2010.
Round One: Eight two-legged ties featuring the 16 lowest-ranked teams in Asia.
Round Two: 15 two-legged ties played on July 23-28, 2011. Winners advance to Round Three.
Round Three: 20 teams will be drawn into five groups of four teams. Played September 2, 2011 to February 29, 2012. Group winners and runners-up advance to Round Four.
Round Four: Two groups of five teams. Played June 3, 2012 to March 26, 2013. Group winners and runners-up qualify.
Round Five: The teams finishing third in Round Four face a home-and-away play-off. The winner advances to the intercontinental play-off.
OCEANIA 0.5 places
• Oceania qualifying home page
A slightly modified qualifying competition.
Round One: The four lowest ranked teams played a league tournament between November 21-26, 2011. The winner of the tournament advanced to Round Two.
Round Two: Also the 2012 OFC Nations Cup, the Group Stage of this competition will act as World Cup qualifying for Oceania. The winner of Round One joins the seven top ranked nations in a league tournament with a semi-final and final. The four semi-finalists will go through. Played in June 2012.
Round Three: One four-team group playing on a home and away basis between September 7, 2012 and March 26, 2013. This was won by New Zealand who go through to intercontinental play-off.
The pairings of the intercontinental play-offs are as follows:
Asia v South America
Concacaf v New Zealand

