The opening night of the quarter-final stage saw hosts Brazil reach the last four, alongside Peru.
Brazil survived after Manchester City striker Gabriel Jesus saw red for a high challenge, just two minutes after Lucas Paqueta gave the current holders the lead.
Paqueta had only come off the bench at half-time, in place of Liverpool's Roberto Firmino, and made an instant impact scoring with a minute.
Peru and Paraguay were both reduced to 10 men in their enthralling 3-3 draw, but a 4-3 penalty win saw them reach the last four.
What happened in the group stage and how is the tournament mapping out?published at 01:25 British Summer Time 3 July 2021
01:25 BST 3 July 2021
Image source, BBC Sport
Hosts Brazil strolled through in Group B, they won their first three games before drawing against Ecuador on the final matchday.
They were ed by Peru, who won two of their four games, Colombia and Ecuador. The latter didn't win of their games, but three draws was enough to progress.
In Group A Argentina matched Brazil's record of 10 points from 12, while Uruguay, Paraguay and Chile also progressed.
The winner of Brazil-Chile will face Peru or Paraguay in the semi-finals, while Argentina or Ecuador will play Colombia or Uruguay in the last four.
What happened last time out?published at 01:24 British Summer Time 3 July 2021
01:24 BST 3 July 2021
Manchester City's Gabriel Jesus scored once, assisted another goal, was sent off and pushed the VAR monitor as Brazil won a first Copa America title in 12 years, beating Peru 3-1.
Jesus set up Everton to volley in the opener before scoring the second.
Paolo Guerrero had briefly given Peru hope when he equalised from the penalty spot minutes before Jesus struck.
Jesus was shown a second yellow with 20 minutes left but Richarlison's late penalty sealed the win.
What is the Copa America?published at 01:24 British Summer Time 3 July 2021
01:24 BST 3 July 2021
Euro 2020 isn't the only major tournament in town this summer.
In Brazil, 10 South American sides will contest the delayed 47th edition of the Copa America, with all 28 games broadcast live on the BBC.
The competition was originally scheduled to take place in 2020, but was postponed because of the coronavirus outbreak.
Largely mirroring the Euros, the Copa America kicks off on 13 June when Brazil take on Venezuela in the opening game. The final takes place on 10 July - although the time difference means that in Europe, it will be seen in the early hours of 11 July, the same day as the Euro 2020 final.
Argentina and Colombia were originally set to co-host the tournament, before it was moved to Brazil on 31 May.
The Copa America usually features 12 teams, with two guest nations from North America or Asia invited to play alongside the 10 of South America's football confederation.
As the two previous winners of the Asian Cup, Australia and Qatar were set to take part this year, but both countries later withdrew because of a clash of fixtures with rearranged 2022 World Cup qualifiers.
That leaves Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela to feature in the continent's championship.
The 10 teams have been split into two groups of five, with the top four teams from each group advancing to the quarter-finals.
Matches will be played across the cities of Brasilia, Goiania, Cuiaba and Rio de Janeiro, with the iconic Maracana stadium hosting the final.