Quina 7038: nenhum ganhador do prêmio principal de R$ 11,6 milhões

The jackpot rolls forward, growing larger with each unclaimed prize
When no player matches all five numbers, the accumulated prize accumulates further, increasing the stakes for the next drawing.

Na noite de sexta-feira, 29 de maio de 2026, o sorteio da Quina 7038 transcorreu sem que nenhum apostador alcançasse o prêmio principal de R$11,6 milhões — uma quantia que segue acumulando, à espera de quem consiga reunir os cinco números certos. Enquanto o jackpot permanece intocado, milhares de brasileiros levaram para casa prêmios menores, lembrando que a fortuna, quando não se concentra em um só ponto, se espalha em pequenas graças por uma multidão. O ciclo recomeça no sábado, com a Quina 7039 oferecendo nova chance a quem acredita que o acaso pode, desta vez, sorrir de forma diferente.

  • O prêmio acumulado de R$11,6 milhões passou mais uma noite sem dono, aumentando a tensão e a expectativa para o próximo sorteio.
  • Nenhum dos bilhetes vendidos acertou os cinco números sorteados no Espaço da Sorte, em São Paulo, frustrando apostadores que miravam o topo.
  • Ainda assim, 96.130 ganhadores distribuídos em três faixas menores receberam prêmios que vão de R$5,73 a R$11.650,55, mostrando que o dinheiro circula mesmo quando o jackpot escapa.
  • O prêmio acumulado engorda e segue para a Quina 7039, marcada para sábado, 30 de maio, às 21h, com apostas aceitas até as 20h.

O sorteio da Quina 7038, realizado na noite de sexta-feira, 29 de maio de 2026, não encontrou um vencedor para o prêmio principal de R$11,6 milhões. Os cinco números foram sorteados às 20h no Espaço da Sorte, em São Paulo, transmitidos ao vivo pelo canal do YouTube da Caixa e pelo G1 — mas nenhum apostador os reuniu em um único bilhete.

O sorteio, porém, não passou em branco. Quarenta e oito apostadores acertaram quatro números e receberam R$11.650,55 cada. Na faixa seguinte, 3.230 pessoas acertaram três números e ganharam R$164,89. No nível mais acessível, 92.852 apostadores acertaram dois números e levaram R$5,73. É assim que a Quina funciona quando o jackpot escapa: o dinheiro se redistribui por uma base ampla de ganhadores menores.

A Quina ocupa o terceiro lugar em popularidade entre as loterias brasileiras, atrás apenas da Mega-Sena e da Lotofácil, mas é considerada a quarta mais difícil de se ganhar no país. As chances de acertar os cinco números com uma aposta simples são de 1 em 24.040.016. Um bilhete básico custa R$3,00, e é possível apostar em até vinte números — quanto mais números escolhidos, maiores as chances, mas também o custo.

Para o próximo sorteio, a Quina 7039, marcado para sábado, 30 de maio, às 21h (horário de Brasília), as apostas podem ser feitas até as 20h em casas lotéricas, pelo site e aplicativo da Caixa, ou via internet banking. Se nenhum apostador acertar os cinco números novamente, o prêmio acumulará mais uma vez — e a espera continuará.

The Quina lottery drawing on Friday night, May 29, 2026, produced no winner of the main prize—a pool of R$11.6 million that had accumulated waiting for someone to match all five numbers. The draw took place at 8 p.m. at the Espaço da Sorte in São Paulo, broadcast live on Caixa's YouTube channel and on G1, as it is each time the lottery runs. The five numbers drawn that evening went unclaimed by any single ticket.

Yet the drawing was far from empty. While no one captured the jackpot, thousands of players won smaller prizes by matching fewer numbers. Forty-eight tickets correctly picked four of the five numbers, each winning R$11,650.55. The tier below that—three correct numbers—produced 3,230 winners, each receiving R$164.89. And at the lowest prize level, 92,852 people matched two numbers and took home R$5.73 each. In the mathematics of lottery play, this is how the money moves: the big prize rolls forward, and the smaller wins distribute across a much wider base of players.

The Quina occupies a particular place in Brazil's lottery landscape. It ranks third in popularity, behind only Mega-Sena and Lotofácil, yet it is considered the fourth-hardest jackpot to win in the country's lottery system. A player's odds of matching all five numbers in a standard five-number ticket are 1 in 24,040,016. Those odds worsen only against Timemania (1 in 26 million), Mega-Sena (1 in 50 million), and +Milionária (1 in 238 million). A basic Quina ticket costs R$3.00, though players can increase their chances by selecting more numbers—six numbers, for instance, costs R$18 and improves odds to 1 in 4,006,669.

The mechanics of play are straightforward. Bettors can walk into any lottery shop across Brazil and select between five and twenty numbers from eighty available. Payment methods have expanded beyond cash; most lottery retailers now accept Pix, credit cards, and debit cards. For those who prefer not to leave home, Caixa offers betting through its website, a mobile app available on iOS and Android, or through internet banking for existing Caixa customers.

When players win, the redemption process depends on the prize amount. Anything up to R$2,428.80 can be claimed at any authorized lottery retailer or Caixa branch. Larger prizes require a trip to a Caixa bank office, where the winner must present identification, a CPF number, and the original betting receipt. Prizes of R$10,000 or more are processed within two business days. The window to claim any prize is ninety days from the drawing; after that, unclaimed money flows into FIES, the federal student loan fund.

The next drawing, Quina 7039, is scheduled for Saturday, May 30, at 9 p.m. Brasília time. Bets can be placed until 8 p.m. that day through lottery shops, the Caixa website, the mobile app, or internet banking. The drawing was originally scheduled earlier but was postponed due to the May 1 holiday. For players watching the accumulating jackpot, the wait continues—the prize pool will grow again if Saturday's drawing also produces no winner of the main prize.

The Quina is the third-most popular lottery in Brazil, behind only Mega-Sena and Lotofácil
— Caixa lottery information
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Inventor

Why does a lottery drawing with no jackpot winner still matter enough to report?

Model

Because the money doesn't vanish. It moves. Ninety-three thousand people won something that night, even if it was small. And the jackpot itself rolls forward, growing larger, which changes the calculus for everyone thinking about buying a ticket next time.

Inventor

What's the actual experience of winning R$5.73?

Model

You matched two numbers out of five. You spent R$3 to play. You made a profit of R$2.73. It's not nothing—it's a small validation that you weren't entirely wrong. But it's also the lottery's way of keeping you in the game, showing you that winning is possible, even if the real prize remains distant.

Inventor

Why is the Quina specifically the third-most popular lottery if it's harder to win than some others?

Model

Popularity isn't purely about odds. The Quina draws daily, which means more chances, more ritual. The entry cost is low—three reais. And there's something about the structure: you can win at multiple levels, so the experience of playing feels less binary than chasing one impossible jackpot.

Inventor

What happens to the money that doesn't get claimed within ninety days?

Model

It goes to FIES, the student loan fund. So unclaimed lottery winnings effectively become education financing. It's a quiet redistribution—money that someone won but never collected ends up helping students pay for university.

Inventor

Does the fact that Caixa broadcasts these drawings live change how people experience them?

Model

It creates a shared moment. Thousands of people watching the same five numbers being drawn at the same time, all hoping. The broadcast legitimizes it, makes it transparent. You're not trusting a machine in a back room; you're watching it happen.

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