Quina 7039: ninguém acerta e prêmio acumula em R$ 15 milhões

The jackpot swells when no one wins, feeding the dream.
Saturday's draw produced no top-prize winners, pushing Monday's jackpot to fifteen million reais.

Mais uma vez, o acaso guardou silêncio: no sorteio 7039 da Quina, realizado no sábado, nenhum apostador acertou as cinco dezenas — 12, 15, 16, 67 e 80 — e o prêmio principal segue acumulado, agora na casa dos R$ 15 milhões para a próxima segunda-feira. É o movimento familiar da fortuna adiada, que ao mesmo tempo frustra e renova a esperança de milhares.

  • Nenhum bilhete bateu as cinco dezenas do concurso 7039, deixando o prêmio máximo sem dono pela mais recente rodada.
  • O jackpot acumulado salta para R$ 15 milhões, ampliando a tensão e o apelo do próximo sorteio, marcado para segunda-feira.
  • Ainda assim, 64 apostadores acertaram quatro números e levaram cerca de R$ 9.591 cada, enquanto 4.842 ganhadores de três acertos receberam aproximadamente R$ 120.
  • A estrutura de premiação em camadas garante que o dinheiro circule mesmo quando o topo não é alcançado, sustentando o interesse semanal no jogo.

O sorteio 7039 da Quina, realizado no sábado à noite, não produziu ganhadores do prêmio principal. As cinco dezenas sorteadas — 12, 15, 16, 67 e 80 — não foram acertadas por nenhum apostador, fazendo o prêmio acumular e chegar a R$ 15 milhões para o concurso de segunda-feira.

Apesar do jackpot vazio, o sorteio distribuiu prêmios nas faixas inferiores. Sessenta e quatro apostas acertaram quatro números, rendendo cerca de R$ 9.591 a cada ganhador. Outros 4.842 jogadores acertaram três dezenas e receberam aproximadamente R$ 120 cada. Na faixa mais ampla, 127.365 bilhetes com dois acertos garantiram pouco menos de R$ 4,60 por aposta.

A Quina permite que o apostador escolha entre cinco e quinze números de um universo de oitenta dezenas. Um bilhete simples, com cinco números, custa R$ 3 e tem chances de um em 24 milhões de acertar o prêmio máximo. Quem preferir, pode optar pela Surpresinha, deixando a Caixa Econômica Federal sortear os números automaticamente, ou pela Teimosinha, que inscreve o mesmo bilhete em até 24 sorteios consecutivos.

Com seis sorteios semanais — de segunda a sábado, sempre às 21h — e o prêmio crescendo a cada concurso sem ganhador, a atenção agora se volta para segunda-feira. Os R$ 15 milhões acumulados prometem atrair ainda mais apostadores dispostos a enfrentar as probabilidades e tentar a sorte.

The Quina lottery draw held on Saturday produced no winners of the top prize. The five numbers pulled—12, 15, 16, 67, and 80—matched no complete tickets, leaving the jackpot unclaimed and swelling the prize pool for Monday's drawing to fifteen million reais.

While no one captured the grand prize, the draw did reward players at lower tiers. Sixty-four tickets matched four of the five numbers, each winning approximately 9,591 reais. A much larger group—4,842 players—matched three numbers and received about 120 reais each. The broadest tier of winners, those who matched two numbers, numbered 127,365 tickets, each collecting just under 4.60 reais.

The Quina operates on a straightforward structure. Players select between five and fifteen numbers from a pool of eighty. The cost of a ticket varies with the number of selections chosen—a five-number ticket costs three reais and carries odds of one in 24 million, while a fifteen-number ticket costs nine reais and improves the odds to one in 8,000. Players can also opt for Surpresinha, allowing the Caixa Econômica Federal, which administers the lottery, to select numbers randomly on their behalf.

Prize distribution follows a fixed formula. The jackpot—awarded to those matching all five numbers—represents 35 percent of the total prize pool. Four-number matches receive 15 percent, three-number matches get 10 percent, and two-number matches claim the remaining 10 percent. This structure ensures that even when the top prize accumulates, smaller winners still receive payouts.

The Quina draws six times weekly, every day from Monday through Saturday at nine in the evening. Beyond the regular draws, the lottery also features the Teimosinha option, allowing players to enter the same ticket in three, six, twelve, eighteen, or twenty-four consecutive drawings. Once yearly, near June 24th, the Quina de São João offers significantly larger prizes than regular draws.

With no winner on Saturday, attention now turns to Monday's draw, where the accumulated prize of fifteen million reais awaits the next player or group of players who match all five numbers. The odds remain steep—roughly one in 24 million for a basic five-number ticket—but the growing jackpot continues to draw players hoping to beat those odds.

The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

Why does the jackpot matter so much when so few people actually win it?

Model

Because it's the dream that sells the ticket. Most players know they won't win the top prize, but the accumulation—watching it grow from draw to draw—makes the possibility feel real enough to spend three reais on.

Inventor

So the people who won with three or four numbers—are they satisfied?

Model

Probably mixed. You matched most of the numbers. You were close. That's both a small victory and a reminder of how narrow the margin is.

Inventor

The lottery draws six times a week. That's a lot of chances to lose.

Model

It's also a lot of chances to win, depending on how you frame it. But yes, the frequency keeps the game alive in people's minds. There's always another draw coming.

Inventor

Does the prize distribution—35 percent to jackpot winners, 15 percent to four-number matches—does that seem fair?

Model

It's designed to keep the system sustainable. The lottery needs to fund itself and the government. But fairness is subjective. You could argue that matching four numbers out of five deserves more than 15 percent.

Inventor

What happens to the money that doesn't go to prizes?

Model

The source doesn't say, but in most lotteries, it goes to the government and to administrative costs. That's how lotteries function—they're a form of taxation on hope.

Inventor

Will the fifteen million reais definitely be won on Monday?

Model

Not necessarily. If no one matches all five numbers again, it accumulates further. The jackpot can grow for weeks or months before someone finally wins.

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