Can France make it two titles in a row when the Six Nations 2026 kicks off in February?

TAGS:

The men’s Six Nations 2026 kicks off on Thursday 5 February, when reigning champions France host England. That opening weekend of fixtures also features Scotland heading to Rome to take on Italy, and Wales looking to avenge their humbling March defeat to England when they travel to Twickenham.

This summer all eyes will be on Australia, where Andy Farrell’s British & Irish Lions squad will be looking to bring home the side’s first tour victory since 2013. But before long we’ll be thinking about the latest instalment of the world’s oldest and most beloved rugby tournament – one of the best things about a northern hemisphere winter.

This article will tell you everything you need to know about the men’s Six Nations 2026, including a recap of the 2025 tournament and details of the championship’s previous winners.


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.


Six Nations 2026 fixtures

Round 1

Thursday 5 February

  • France v Ireland
    Venue TBC

Saturday 7 February

  • Italy v Scotland
    Stadio Olimpico, Rome
  • England v Wales
    Allianz Stadium, Twickenham

Round 2

Saturday 14 February

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

Sunday 15 February

  • Wales v France
    Principality Stadium, Cardiff

Round 3

Saturday 21 February

  • England v Ireland
    Allianz Stadium, Twickenham
  • Wales v Scotland
    Principality Stadium, Cardiff

Sunday 22 February

  • France v Italy
    Venue TBC

Round 4

Friday 6 March

  • Ireland v Wales
    Aviva Stadium, Dublin

Saturday 7 March

  • Scotland v France
    Scottish Gas Murrayfield, Edinburgh
  • Italy v England
    Stadio Olimpico, Rome

Round 5

Saturday 14 March

  • Ireland v Scotland
    Aviva Stadium, Dublin
  • Wales v Italy
    Principality Stadium, Cardiff
  • France v England
    Venue TBC

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


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. They’re currently looking for a new permanent head coach, though Matt Sherratt (who was interim boss for three games of the 2025 Six Nations) now has the unenviable task of ending a record-breaking 17-match losing streak when the side heads to Japan this summer.

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


Download the digital edition of Rugby World straight to your tablet or subscribe to the print edition to get the magazine delivered to your door.

Follow Rugby World on FacebookInstagram and Twitter/X.