The jackpot rolls forward, and hope accumulates with it.
Na noite de terça-feira, 19 de maio de 2026, nenhum apostador brasileiro alcançou os cinco números sorteados pela Quina no Espaço da Sorte, em São Paulo, deixando o prêmio acumulado de R$ 11,7 milhões à espera de um novo dono. O acúmulo não é apenas uma estatística — é o ritmo próprio da esperança coletiva, que se renova a cada sorteio sem vencedor. Milhares de apostadores, porém, celebraram prêmios menores, lembrando que a loteria existe em camadas, e que a fortuna raramente chega de uma só vez.
- Nenhum apostador acertou os cinco números do concurso 7029, e o prêmio de R$ 11,7 milhões escorregou para o próximo sorteio, crescendo ainda mais.
- A tensão do acúmulo atrai mais jogadores: quanto maior o prêmio acumulado, mais intensa a corrida às casas lotéricas e aos aplicativos da Caixa.
- Ainda assim, 142.164 apostadores saíram da noite com algo no bolso — prêmios que variam de R$ 3,68 a R$ 6.174,91, dependendo de quantos números acertaram.
- O próximo sorteio, Quina 7030, acontece na quarta-feira, 20 de maio, às 21h (horário de Brasília), com apostas aceitas até as 20h pelo site, app ou lotéricas.
- O prêmio acumulado transforma cada novo concurso em uma aposta maior — e o ciclo de esperança recomeça com odds de 1 em 24 milhões para quem joga o mínimo.
O sorteio da Quina 7029, realizado na noite de terça-feira, 19 de maio de 2026, no Espaço da Sorte em São Paulo, não encontrou nenhum apostador capaz de acertar os cinco números sorteados. Com isso, o prêmio acumulado de R$ 11,745 milhões segue intacto e passa para o concurso seguinte, marcado para a quarta-feira, 20 de maio.
Apesar do jackpot não distribuído, a noite não foi em vão para todos. Oitenta e nove apostadores acertaram quatro números e receberam R$ 6.174,91 cada. Outros 6.442 acertaram três números, levando R$ 81,24 por aposta. A maior fatia de vencedores — 142.164 pessoas — acertou dois números e ganhou R$ 3,68 por bilhete. Esses prêmios secundários sustentam a estrutura que faz da Quina a terceira loteria mais popular do Brasil, atrás apenas da Mega-Sena e da Lotofácil.
A mecânica do jogo é simples: o apostador escolhe entre cinco e vinte números de um universo de oitenta, com o bilhete mínimo custando R$ 3,00. As chances de acertar tudo com a aposta mínima são de uma em 24 milhões — raras o suficiente para tornar o prêmio valioso, mas acessíveis o suficiente para manter milhões de brasileiros apostando regularmente.
As apostas para o Quina 7030 podem ser feitas até as 20h do dia do sorteio, em lotéricas, pelo site da Caixa Loterias, pelo aplicativo ou pelo internet banking — este último restrito a correntistas da Caixa. O sorteio acontece às 21h, horário de Brasília, com um prêmio que já nasce maior do que o anterior.
The Quina lottery drawing on the evening of Tuesday, May 19, 2026, produced no winner of the jackpot. The five numbers drawn at the Espaço da Sorte in São Paulo—broadcast live on Caixa's YouTube channel and on G1—failed to match any single ticket submitted across the country. The prize pool, sitting at R$ 11.745 million, now rolls forward to the next drawing scheduled for Wednesday, May 20.
While the top prize went unclaimed, the drawing was far from a washout for everyone who played. Thousands of smaller winners emerged from the night's results. Eighty-nine players correctly predicted four of the five numbers, each collecting R$ 6,174.91. A much larger group—6,442 people—matched three numbers and received R$ 81.24 apiece. The broadest band of winners consisted of 142,164 players who matched two numbers, earning R$ 3.68 per ticket. These secondary prizes, modest as they are, represent the structure that keeps the Quina functioning as Brazil's third most popular lottery, trailing only the Mega-Sena and Lotofácil.
The Quina operates on straightforward mechanics. A player selects between five and twenty numbers from a pool of eighty, with a basic five-number ticket costing R$ 3.00. The odds of matching all five numbers in a minimum bet stand at one in 24 million—steep enough to make the jackpot feel genuinely rare, yet accessible enough that millions of Brazilians try their luck regularly. For those willing to spend more, a six-number ticket costs R$ 18 and improves the odds to one in 4 million. The game ranks as the fourth hardest lottery in Brazil to win outright, behind only Timemania, Mega-Sena, and +Milionária.
Betting remains simple and widely available. Players can visit any of the country's licensed lottery shops, fill out a ticket by hand, and pay cash or card. Many locations now accept Pix, the instant payment system that has become ubiquitous in Brazil. For those who prefer to stay home, the Caixa Loterias website, mobile app, or the bank's own internet banking platform all allow remote wagering—though the last option is restricted to Caixa account holders. Tickets for the next drawing can be purchased until 8 PM on the day of the draw.
Claiming winnings follows a tiered system based on prize size. Amounts up to R$ 2,428.80 can be collected at any authorized lottery retailer or Caixa branch without fanfare. Larger sums require a visit to a Caixa agency with identification, CPF documentation, and the original betting receipt. Prizes of R$ 10,000 or more are processed within two business days. Winners have ninety days from the drawing date to claim their money; after that window closes, unclaimed funds transfer to FIES, the federal student loan program.
The next drawing, Quina 7030, takes place Wednesday evening at 9 PM Brasília time. The jackpot will have grown by the amount that rolled over from this drawing, making it an even larger target for the millions of players who will try again.
Citas Notables
The Quina is Brazil's third most popular lottery, behind only Mega-Sena and Lotofácil— Caixa Loterias reporting
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Why does a lottery with such brutal odds—one in 24 million—keep drawing millions of players week after week?
Because the odds feel abstract until you win. People don't think about the one in 24 million; they think about what they'd do with 11 million reais. And the secondary prizes keep hope alive. You match two numbers, you get your money back. You match three, you feel close. That psychological structure is the whole game.
So the people who won R$ 3.68 for matching two numbers—are they actually ahead, or did they just get their ticket price back?
They're slightly behind. A five-number ticket costs R$ 3.00, so they made 68 cents. It's not nothing, but it's also not why anyone plays. What matters is that 142,000 people felt like they participated in something, and a tiny fraction of them broke even. That's the machinery.
The prize rolled over to the next night. Does that happen often?
Often enough that the jackpots grow. That's how you get to 11 million, 12 million, 15 million. The longer nobody wins, the more money accumulates. It's a feedback loop—bigger prizes draw more players, which means more tickets, which means the odds of someone winning actually go down even as the pot grows.
Why is Quina the third most popular lottery in Brazil, not the first?
Mega-Sena has bigger jackpots and more cultural weight. Lotofácil is easier to win—you only need to match 15 numbers out of 25, so people feel like they have a real shot. Quina sits in the middle. Hard enough to feel like a real gamble, but not as mythical as Mega-Sena.
If someone wins R$ 50,000, how quickly do they actually get the money?
Within two business days if it's over R$ 10,000. But they have to go to a Caixa branch in person with their ID and CPF and the original ticket. You can't just walk into any lottery shop and collect a big prize. The system makes you prove who you are and that the ticket is real.