EURO 2024
Which teams have qualified for the Euro 2024 quarterfinals? Draw, fixtures, pairings, dates...
England and France remain alive despite underperforming, while Spain, Germany and the Netherlands have impressed in reaching the last eight, which starts on 5 July.
The Euro 2024 round of 16 drew to a close on Tuesday (2 July), with eight teams through to the quarterfinals and in with a chance of being crowned European champions. All of the most fancied nations made it through the group stage, and it was similar story in the first knockout round, with the exception of defending champions Italy, who were eliminated relatively comfortably by Switzerland.
England and Portugal made incredibly hard work of seeing off Slovakia (after extra time) and Slovenia (on penalties, with Cristiano Ronaldo in the headlines again) respectively, while hosts Germany needed help from VAR to get past Denmark.
Spain, on the other hand, had little difficulty in sweeping Georgia aside and France, despite another stodgy attacking performance, edged past Belgium, much to Kylian Mbappé's delight.
The last two quarterfinal spots were taken by the Netherlands, who defeated Romania in Munich in Tuesday’s early game, and Türkiye, who saw off Austria in an entertaining clash in Leipzig.
Euro 2024 round of 16 draw and results
Let’s have a look at how the first Round of 16 ties have played out and how the quarter finals are shaping up.
Euro 2024 quarterfinal draw
As is normally the case for major international tournaments, the bracket for the knockout rounds has already been defined, which means the quarterfinal draw became immediately clearer with every passing round-of-16 tie.
Spain will face Germany and Portugal take on France in what looks to be the harder side of the draw, with England against Switzerland and the Netherlands vs Türkiye the two ties in the opposite half.
We are also starting to have a fair idea of how the semifinals are likely to look.
The Euro 2024 final will be played on Sunday 14 July at Olympiastadion in Berlin, which previously hosted the 2006 World Cup final between Italy and France, and the 2015 Champions League final between Barcelona and Juventus.