The jackpot rolled forward to the next drawing, as it so often does.
Na noite de sexta-feira, 22 de maio, a Quina realizou seu sorteio 7032 no Espaço da Sorte, em São Paulo, sem que nenhum apostador acertasse os cinco números sorteados. O prêmio principal acumula, como tantas vezes antes, carregando consigo a esperança renovada de milhares de jogadores que, por três reais, mantêm viva a possibilidade do acaso. A loteria, terceira mais popular do Brasil, segue seu ritmo semanal — distribuindo pequenas alegrias enquanto reserva a grande para um momento ainda por vir.
- Nenhum apostador acertou os cinco números do concurso 7032 — 05, 28, 48, 49 e 71 — e o jackpot segue acumulado para o próximo sorteio.
- Ainda assim, mais de 62 mil jogadores receberam algum prêmio, do centavo ao milhar, mostrando que a loteria distribui muito antes de entregar tudo.
- Dezessete apostadores acertaram quatro números e levaram R$ 17.327,35 cada, enquanto outros 2.252 receberam R$ 124,57 por três acertos.
- O prêmio acumulado cresce e atrai novos apostadores, cada um apostando três reais contra uma chance em 31,1 milhões de mudar de vida.
- Quem jogou pode conferir o resultado em lotéricas, no site oficial ou no aplicativo da Caixa Econômica Federal — a resposta está a um clique de distância.
Na noite de sexta-feira, 22 de maio, o sorteio 7032 da Quina revelou seus cinco números — 05, 28, 48, 49 e 71 — no Espaço da Sorte, em São Paulo. Nenhum apostador acertou todos eles. O prêmio principal, com um milhão de reais em jogo, acumulou mais uma vez e seguirá crescendo até o próximo sorteio.
A Quina é a terceira loteria mais popular do Brasil, e sua acessibilidade explica muito dessa preferência: com apenas três reais por aposta e sorteios de segunda a sábado, ela se encaixa na rotina de quem quer tentar a sorte sem grandes investimentos. As chances de acertar o jackpot são de uma em 31,1 milhões — íngremes, mas não impeditivas para quem joga pelo prazer da possibilidade.
O concurso não ficou sem vencedores. Dezessete apostadores acertaram quatro números e receberam R$ 17.327,35 cada. Outros 2.252 jogadores levaram R$ 124,57 por três acertos, e 60.372 pessoas — a maior fatia — ganharam R$ 4,64 ao acertar dois números. É assim que as loterias funcionam: muitos ganham pouco, alguns ganham mais, e de tempos em tempos alguém ganha tudo.
Os resultados estão disponíveis em qualquer lotérica do país, no site oficial ou no aplicativo da Caixa Econômica Federal. Com o jackpot acumulado, o próximo sorteio já começa maior — e a aposta de três reais volta a carregar o peso leve de uma esperança renovada.
The Quina lottery drew its numbers on Friday evening, May 22nd, at the Espaço da Sorte in São Paulo, with a million reais waiting to be claimed. But when the five digits were called—05, 28, 48, 49, 71—no one held a ticket matching all of them. The jackpot rolled forward to the next drawing, as it so often does.
The Quina occupies a particular place in Brazil's lottery landscape. It is the third most popular game the country offers, and for good reason: at three reais per ticket, it sits at the accessible end of the betting spectrum. Drawings happen six days a week, Monday through Saturday, creating regular opportunities for players to try their luck. The odds of winning the full prize remain steep—one in roughly 31 million with a standard three-real wager—but the low entry cost means more people can afford to play.
Though no one won the top prize in draw 7032, the money distributed across the lower tiers still found its way to thousands of players. Seventeen tickets matched four of the five numbers, each worth 17,327 reais and 35 centavos. Another 2,252 players got three numbers right, collecting 124 reais and 57 centavos apiece. The smallest prize tier—matching just two numbers—went to 60,372 people, each receiving 4 reais and 64 centavos. These smaller wins may seem modest, but they represent the bread and butter of how lotteries distribute their revenue: most players win something small, a few win something larger, and occasionally someone wins everything.
For those who played, verification is straightforward. Tickets can be checked at any of the physical lottery retailers scattered across the country, or players can log into the official website or mobile app—available on both Android and iOS—to see whether their numbers came through. The Caixa Econômica Federal, which operates the Quina as one of its classic lottery products, makes the results public immediately after each drawing.
The accumulation of the jackpot means the next drawing will offer an even larger prize to whoever finally matches all five numbers. This is the rhythm of the game: small wins sustain regular players, while the growing jackpot draws in new ones, each betting three reais on the possibility that this time, their numbers will align.
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does the Quina matter enough to report on, week after week, when no one wins the jackpot?
Because millions of Brazilians play it. The story isn't really about the lottery—it's about what people do with three reais and hope. When you report the results, you're acknowledging that this is real life for them.
But if no one won the big prize, isn't that the story? The disappointment?
It could be, but that's not quite right. The story is that the money still moved. Seventeen people got a real payout. Sixty thousand got something back. The system worked, even if the dream didn't materialize.
The odds are one in 31 million. Doesn't that make the whole thing feel futile?
It does to someone who thinks about probability. But the Quina costs three reais. For most people, that's not a life-changing bet. It's the price of a coffee. The futility is built in, and people accept it.
So why do you think people keep playing?
Because the alternative is certainty. You don't play the lottery to be rational. You play because once a week, for three reais, you get to imagine something different. That's worth something.
Does the fact that it's the third most popular lottery tell us anything?
It tells us it's not the flashiest game, but it's the most accessible. The Mega-Sena has bigger prizes but costs more. The Quina is the everyman's lottery. That's why it endures.