The prize pool rolls forward untouched to the next contest
No Brasil, onde a esperança de uma virada de fortuna se renova a cada noite, o sorteio 7037 da Quina passou sem que ninguém acertasse as cinco dezenas — 09, 26, 42, 55 e 66 — e o prêmio de R$ 10,2 milhões seguiu seu curso natural de acumulação. É a lógica intrínseca das loterias: o não-ganho de hoje alimenta o sonho de amanhã, e o próximo concurso, marcado para a sexta-feira, 29 de maio, já promete R$ 12 milhões a quem souber — ou tiver a sorte de — reunir os cinco números certos.
- O jackpot de R$ 10,2 milhões escapou intacto de mais um sorteio, sem que nenhum apostador acertasse as cinco dezenas.
- A ausência de um grande vencedor não significa ausência de prêmios: 51 apostadores levaram quase R$ 10 mil cada ao acertar quatro números.
- Mais de 110 mil pessoas acertaram dois números e receberam valores simbólicos, lembrando que a loteria distribui esperança em doses desiguais.
- O prêmio acumulado cresce para R$ 12 milhões e será disputado já nesta sexta-feira, 29 de maio, às 21h, no concurso 7038.
- O ciclo se repete: cada sorteio sem ganhador do prêmio máximo amplia a tensão e o apelo do próximo, atraindo ainda mais apostadores.
Na noite de quinta-feira, 28 de maio, o sorteio 7037 da Quina revelou as dezenas 09, 26, 42, 55 e 66 — e nenhum apostador havia marcado todas as cinco em seu bilhete. O prêmio estimado em R$ 10,2 milhões não encontrou dono e segue acumulado, como determina a mecânica da loteria: quando ninguém vence, o dinheiro cresce e espera.
O próximo concurso, o 7038, está agendado para esta sexta-feira, 29 de maio, às 21h, com prêmio estimado em R$ 12 milhões. É o ritmo familiar da Quina, que sorteia seis vezes por semana e permite que os prêmios se acumulem até que alguém finalmente reúna os cinco números certos entre os oitenta disponíveis.
Se o topo ficou vazio, os escalões inferiores distribuíram recompensas. Cinquenta e um apostadores acertaram quatro dezenas e receberam R$ 9.969,54 cada. Outros 4.473 acertaram três números e levaram R$ 108,25. Na base da pirâmide, mais de 110 mil pessoas acertaram dois números e receberam R$ 4,38 — uma quantia modesta, mas que ilustra como a loteria distribui prêmios em camadas, recompensando a proximidade com a combinação perfeita.
Para quem ganhar no próximo sorteio, as regras de resgate seguem o valor do prêmio: quantias menores podem ser retiradas em casas lotéricas ou agências da Caixa, enquanto prêmios acima de R$ 10 mil exigem apresentação de documento com CPF e comprovante de aposta em uma agência, com pagamento em até dois dias úteis. As apostas para o concurso 7038 podem ser feitas até as 20h desta sexta-feira.
The Quina lottery draw on Thursday night, May 28th, at 9 p.m., produced no jackpot winners. The five numbers pulled—09, 26, 42, 55, 66—matched no single ticket that had wagered on all five digits. The prize pool, which had been estimated at 10.2 million reais before the draw, now rolls forward untouched to the next contest.
This is how the Quina works in Brazil: when no one wins the top prize, the money accumulates. The next drawing, scheduled for Friday, May 29th, will offer an estimated 12 million reais to whoever finally matches all five numbers. It's a familiar rhythm for players accustomed to watching prizes grow larger with each draw that produces no winner.
While the jackpot went unclaimed, the draw did produce winners at lower prize tiers. Fifty-one players matched four of the five numbers and each received 9,969.54 reais. The tier below that—three correct numbers—saw 4,473 winning tickets, each worth 108.25 reais. At the bottom rung, 110,445 people matched two numbers and collected 4.38 reais each. These smaller prizes represent the lottery's structure: the closer you come to the full five, the more you win, but the odds of matching even two numbers are steep enough that hundreds of thousands of tickets still qualify.
The Quina draws six times a week, Monday through Saturday, always at 9 p.m. Brasília time. Players select five numbers from a pool of eighty and pay three reais for the simplest bet. The lottery is broadcast live on RedeTV!, on the Caixa bank's YouTube and Facebook pages, and on television. Betting closes at 8 p.m. on the day of the draw, giving players a one-hour window to place their wagers.
For those who do win, the redemption process depends on the amount. Prizes under 2,428.79 reais can be claimed at any authorized lottery retailer or Caixa bank branch; online players can also transfer winnings directly to Mercado Pago. Larger prizes must be collected at a Caixa branch, requiring the original ID with CPF and the original betting receipt. Prizes of 10,000 reais or more are paid within two business days of presentation at a Caixa office.
The previous draw, on Wednesday the 27th, had produced its own set of numbers: 15, 42, 63, 66, 77. Looking back further, the ten most recent draws show the typical scatter of results—no obvious pattern, no numbers appearing with suspicious frequency. This is the nature of lottery draws: each one independent, each one a fresh chance for someone to match five numbers and claim a prize that has been growing larger with each passing day.
Citas Notables
The Quina draws six times a week, Monday through Saturday, always at 9 p.m. Brasília time— Lottery rules
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Why does a lottery story matter? It's just numbers drawn from a machine.
Because millions of people play it. When no one wins, the prize grows, and that growth changes the psychology of the next draw. Twelve million reais is different from ten million. People notice.
But fifty-one people did win something. Why isn't that the headline?
Because in the Quina, the jackpot is what people come for. Winning ten thousand reais is real money, but it's not why someone bought a ticket. They bought it for the chance at the full prize. The smaller wins are consolation.
How many people actually play this lottery?
The source doesn't say exactly, but you can infer it from the numbers. Over 110,000 people matched just two numbers. If that many people got the lowest prize, the total number of tickets sold must be in the millions.
And the money that accumulates—where does it go if no one ever wins?
The source doesn't address that. But in most lotteries, if a prize goes unclaimed long enough, it eventually goes to the state or to social programs. That's not mentioned here, though.
So this is just a report of what happened, not an investigation into the system.
Exactly. It's a service piece. People want to know if they won, how much they won, and when the next draw is. The story delivers that information clearly and completely.