Ninety days to claim, or the money disappears.
A cada sorteio, a Loteria Federal transforma números em destinos — e no sábado, 6 de junho de 2026, a Caixa Econômica Federal realizou o concurso 6072, colocando meio milhão de reais à disposição de quem tivesse o bilhete certo. É um ritual antigo: cinco prêmios escalonados, milhões de bilhetes em circulação, e um prazo de noventa dias para que a sorte se converta em realidade. Como sempre, o tempo corre não apenas até o sorteio, mas depois dele.
- O prêmio principal de R$500.000 do concurso 6072 aguarda um ganhador que talvez ainda não saiba que ganhou.
- Cinco faixas de premiação — de R$500 mil a R$20.300 — criam múltiplas camadas de tensão para quem confere o bilhete.
- Combinações parciais como milhar, centena e dezena mantêm vivos milhões de bilhetes que, de outra forma, seriam descartados.
- O relógio já começou: ganhadores têm exatamente 90 dias para comparecer a uma agência da Caixa com RG e CPF — ou perder tudo.
- Bilhetes comprados pelo aplicativo exigem o QR code gerado na compra, um detalhe que pode separar o prêmio do esquecimento.
No sábado, 6 de junho de 2026, às 19h (horário de Brasília), a Caixa Econômica Federal realizou o concurso 6072 da Loteria Federal, com prêmio máximo de R$500.000 para o acerto do primeiro número sorteado. Os demais prêmios seguiram a escala tradicional: R$35.000 para o segundo sorteio, R$30.000 para o terceiro, R$25.000 para o quarto e R$20.300 para o quinto.
Além dos prêmios principais por acerto completo, a Loteria Federal oferece retorno parcial a quem acertar o milhar, a centena ou a dezena de qualquer um dos cinco números sorteados. Há ainda uma via secundária: acertar os dois últimos algarismos do bilhete com os dois finais do primeiro prêmio — ou com os números imediatamente anterior e posterior a ele. São caminhos menores, mas que mantêm viva a esperança de milhões de apostadores.
Para referência, o concurso anterior — o 6071, de quarta-feira, 3 de junho — teve como primeiro prêmio o bilhete 19140, seguido por 57814, 72380, 48664 e 05144. Já o concurso 6070 premiou o bilhete 97290 com o meio milhão.
Quem acertar o concurso 6072 tem 90 dias a partir da data do sorteio para resgatar o prêmio em uma agência da Caixa, apresentando documento de identidade e CPF. Apostadores que compraram pela plataforma digital devem apresentar o QR code gerado no momento da compra. Após o prazo, prêmios não resgatados são incorporados de volta ao sistema — um destino silencioso que, a cada ciclo, engole bilhetes esquecidos em gavetas.
On Saturday, June 6th, 2026, Caixa Econômica Federal held drawing 6072 of the Federal Lottery, with a top prize of half a million reais waiting to be claimed. The draw took place at 7 p.m. Brasília time, following the standard format of five separate prize tiers that have defined this lottery for decades.
The prize structure descended in familiar steps: R$500,000 for matching the first draw, R$35,000 for the second, R$30,000 for the third, R$25,000 for the fourth, and R$20,300 for the fifth. These amounts represent the main prizes—the full-ticket matches that most players chase. But the Federal Lottery has always offered more granular ways to win, and this drawing was no exception.
A player holding a ticket could claim a prize by matching any of the five complete numbers drawn across the main tiers. Beyond that, the lottery rewards partial matches: the thousands digit, the hundreds digit, or the tens digit from any of the five winning numbers. There was also a secondary path to victory—matching the final two digits of your ticket to the final two digits of the first prize number, or to the digits immediately before or after it. These smaller wins typically yielded modest sums, but they kept millions of tickets alive with some return.
For context, the previous drawing—6071, held on Wednesday, June 3rd—had produced its own set of winners. That draw's first prize went to ticket 19140, with subsequent prizes claimed by tickets 57814, 72380, 48664, and 05144. The drawing before that, 6070, saw the R$500,000 go to 97290. These sequences of numbers, meaningless to most, represented life-changing moments for whoever held the matching tickets.
Claiming a prize required a trip to a Caixa branch with identification and a CPF number in hand. For those who had purchased tickets online through the Caixa app, the process was slightly different—they would need to present the QR code generated by the application. The bank had set a firm deadline: ninety days from the drawing date to claim winnings. After that window closed, unclaimed prizes would be forfeited, absorbed back into the system or redirected to state programs. It was a rule that caught careless winners every cycle, tickets left in drawers or lost to time.
Citas Notables
Players can win by matching any of the five complete numbers drawn, or by matching partial digits from those numbers, or by matching the final digits of their ticket to the first prize number or its adjacent digits.— Caixa Econômica Federal lottery rules
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Why does a lottery drawing warrant this kind of detailed coverage? It's just numbers being pulled.
Because for someone holding the right ticket, those numbers are everything. Half a million reais can change a life in Brazil. The coverage is for the people checking their tickets at home, hoping.
But most people lose. Doesn't that make this feel like you're reporting on a system designed to take their money?
It does, and that's worth sitting with. But the lottery exists. People play it. The responsibility is to report it clearly—the prizes, the rules, the deadline—so if someone wins, they know what to do and don't miss their window.
The ninety-day deadline seems harsh. Do many people miss it?
The source doesn't say, but you can imagine it happens. Someone wins and doesn't realize it. Or life gets in the way. Ninety days sounds like a lot until it isn't.
What about the partial wins? The tens digit match—does that actually matter to people?
It has to. If you're playing the Federal Lottery, you're probably not wealthy. An extra few hundred reais from matching part of a number is real money. It's the difference between breaking even and losing.
So the lottery is more forgiving than it first appears.
In structure, yes. In outcome, probably not. But the rules are there, and they're worth knowing.