Lotofácil 3691 sorteia R$ 2 milhões; confira os números de hoje

The odds of winning sit behind both Dia de Sorte and the Federal Lottery
Despite its name, Lotofácil ranks second in popularity but offers worse chances than some competitors.

Every week, millions of Brazilians pause to measure their fate against fifteen numbers drawn in São Paulo — a ritual that blends hope, mathematics, and the enduring human appetite for transformation through chance. On the evening of May 21st, the Lotofácil lottery concluded its 3691st draw, releasing a R$ 2 million prize into the world and inviting those who held tickets to discover whether fortune had chosen them. It is a modest ceremony, repeated six nights a week, yet it carries the weight of all the dreams quietly staked upon it.

  • R$ 2 million hung in the balance as the Espaço da Sorte in São Paulo revealed fifteen numbers at precisely 9 PM on Thursday night.
  • Despite its name, Lotofácil is anything but easy — players face odds of roughly 1 in 3.27 million when betting the minimum R$ 3.50 on a simple ticket.
  • The draw rippled outward immediately, sending ticket-holders across Brazil into the tense ritual of checking their numbers against 02, 03, 05, 08, 09, 10, 13, 14, 15, 18, 19, 21, 23, 24, and 25.
  • Multiple prize tiers soften the blow for partial matches, keeping the game's ecosystem of hope alive even for those who fell short of the jackpot.
  • With draws running Monday through Saturday and betting open both in shops and on digital platforms, the next opportunity to try again arrives almost before the disappointment of the last one fades.

On Thursday evening, May 21st, the Lotofácil lottery held its 3691st draw at the Espaço da Sorte in São Paulo, announcing a R$ 2 million prize at nine o'clock. The fifteen winning numbers were 02, 03, 05, 08, 09, 10, 13, 14, 15, 18, 19, 21, 23, 24, and 25 — a combination that, for some ticket-holders, marked the beginning of a verification ritual charged with anticipation.

The game's name promises ease, but its mathematics tell a more sobering story. Lotofácil is Brazil's second most popular lottery, yet the odds of claiming the top prize on a minimum R$ 3.50 bet — the simplest wager, covering exactly fifteen numbers — stand at approximately 1 in 3.27 million. Winning is rarer than the game's casual familiarity might suggest.

What sustains its hold on Brazilian culture is a combination of accessibility and rhythm. Draws happen six days a week, meaning another chance is never far away. Players can walk into any lottery shop for a paper ticket or bet through official websites and mobile apps on Android and iOS. Prizes are distributed across multiple tiers based on how many numbers a player matched, ensuring that the two-million-real jackpot is only the highest point in a broader structure of possible rewards — one that keeps millions returning, draw after draw, to test their luck against fifteen numbers and the quiet arithmetic of chance.

The Lotofácil lottery drew two million reais on Thursday evening, May 21st, with the winning combination announced at nine o'clock from the Espaço da Sorte in São Paulo. The fifteen numbers that emerged from the draw were: 02, 03, 05, 08, 09, 10, 13, 14, 15, 18, 19, 21, 23, 24, and 25. For anyone holding a ticket, the moment of checking those numbers against their own choices had arrived.

Despite its name suggesting simplicity, Lotofácil ranks as the country's second most popular lottery game, though the odds tell a different story. The probability of winning sits behind both Dia de Sorte and the Federal Lottery in terms of likelihood. A player betting the minimum amount—three reais and fifty cents—faces odds of one in roughly 3.27 million of claiming the top prize. The game's structure requires selecting at least fifteen numbers from the available pool on a ticket, with that baseline three-fifty wager covering the simplest possible bet.

The lottery operates on a predictable schedule, drawing six days a week from Monday through Saturday, which means another chance comes quickly. Players can participate in multiple ways: walking into a physical lottery shop to purchase a paper ticket, or betting online through the official website or mobile applications available for both Android and iOS devices. The accessibility of these options has helped sustain Lotofácil's position as a fixture in Brazilian gambling culture.

For those who did match some or all of the fifteen numbers drawn on Thursday, the verification process begins immediately. The lottery system calculates prizes across multiple tiers based on how many numbers a player correctly predicted, with the two-million-real jackpot representing the top tier. The draw itself, conducted in a public setting with transparent procedures, maintains the legitimacy that keeps millions returning week after week to try their luck.

La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Inventor

Why does a lottery game called "easy" actually have worse odds than some of its competitors?

Model

The name refers to how you play it—picking fifteen numbers is mechanically simpler than some other games—but the math works against you. With odds of one in 3.27 million, it's anything but easy to win.

Inventor

What makes Lotofácil the second most popular if the odds are so poor?

Model

Habit, accessibility, and the low entry price. Three-fifty reais is almost nothing. You can buy a ticket anywhere, any day except Sunday. That consistency matters more than the math.

Inventor

How often do people actually have a chance to play?

Model

Six days a week, Monday through Saturday. Miss one draw, another comes tomorrow. That frequency keeps it in people's minds and routines.

Inventor

Does it matter whether someone buys a physical ticket or bets online?

Model

Not for the odds or the prize. It's just convenience. Some people still prefer the ritual of walking into a lottery shop. Others use their phone. The draw is the same either way.

Inventor

What happens after someone checks their numbers?

Model

If they've matched enough, they claim their prize. If not, they wait for the next draw. That cycle repeats endlessly for millions of Brazilians.

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