As has been the case for some time now, in the United Kingdom the BBC and ITV/STV will share broadcast rights for the European Championship.
The BBC will show England’s first two matches against Serbia and Denmark after ITV banked on Gareth Southgate’s men reaching at least the semi-finals.
ITV picked England’s potentially-decisive final Group C game against Slovenia, plus any last-16 fixture involving the Three Lions and any semi-final.
The BBC will show any England quarter-final, with both channels – as always – sharing the final.
The opening match of the tournament between Scotland and hosts Germany will be on ITV, with the BBC picking the Scots’ other Group A games, against Switzerland and Hungary.
Euro 2024 fixtures and results can be found via our Euro 2024 hub.
A total of 24 teams will compete at the tournament. Poland, Ukraine and Georgia were the last to confirm their places, via the play-offs.
The top two teams from each group of four will qualify for the round of 16, along with the four best third-place teams. The tournament will then follow a one-leg knock-out format until the champion is crowned in the final.
Fans can apply for tickets for any team via the Uefa Euro 2024 ticket portal.
Italian DJ group Meduza, American pop-rock giants OneRepublic and German pop icon Kim Petras have united to create the official song for the Euros. It’s called Fire. According to the tournament organisers the song “merges the Italian group’s much-loved anthemic house production, OneRepublic’s compelling soundscapes and Leony’s pop expertise into a track that embodies the fervour and spirit of football and music fans alike.”
Judge it for yourself here:
Neymar made an emotional return to his boyhood club Santos last monthThe 33-year-old has been linked with a European football comeback next term L
Key eventsShow key events onlyPlease turn on JavaScript to use this featureSouthampton: With the teams separated by 52 points, Southampton face a daunting weeke
Sir Jim Ratcliffe is making another round of redundancies at Manchester United but the sharp drop in staff is at odds with European rivals who are adding to the