Apart from all ten CONMEBOL national teams which were eligible to enter, CONMEBOL initially planned to hold a 16-team tournament by inviting six teams from outside CONMEBOL, similar to the
Copa América Centenario three years earlier. On 16 March 2018, CONMEBOL announced three teams from CONCACAF and three teams from the
Asian Football Confederation (AFC) would be invited to participate in the 2019 Copa América. On 12 April 2018, it was announced that
Qatar, the host of the
2022 FIFA World Cup, had accepted the invitation. On 4 May 2018, CONMEBOL announced that the tournament would instead be played with 12 teams, the same number as previous editions since
1993 (apart from the
Copa América Centenario held in 2016), with the two guest teams being Qatar and
Japan from the AFC. Both teams managed to reach the
final of the
2019 AFC Asian Cup held in the UAE, which was won by Qatar. Qatar made their debut appearance in the Copa América, becoming the first Arab nation to play in the tournament, while Japan made their second appearance, their first since
1999. This was also the first Copa América to not feature any team from CONCACAF since teams had been invited; in particular,
Mexico, which competed in all ten editions since 1993 as an invited team, did not participate in this tournament. United States competed in four tournaments, including the 2016 event as host. • • • (hosts) • (title holders) • • • (invitee) • • • (invitee) • • ==Draw==