The winning combination—37, 02, 68, 12, 76—was announced at 9 p.m.
Toda semana, milhões de brasileiros depositam numa combinação de números a esperança silenciosa de uma virada de vida. Na noite desta terça-feira, 9 de junho, a Quina sorteou as dezenas 37, 02, 68, 12 e 76, colocando em jogo R$ 8,5 milhões acumulados — um convite renovado ao eterno diálogo entre o acaso e o desejo humano de transformação.
- O prêmio acumulado de R$ 8,5 milhões criou uma corrida silenciosa às lotéricas e plataformas digitais antes do fechamento das apostas às 20h30.
- O resultado foi transmitido ao vivo nas redes sociais e no YouTube da Caixa Econômica Federal, tornando o momento do sorteio um evento público e acessível a qualquer pessoa com conexão à internet.
- A estrutura de prêmios em cascata — do acerto de dois números até o quíntuplo — mantém viva a tensão mesmo para quem não acertou tudo, distribuindo esperança em diferentes graus.
- No horizonte, a Quina de São João, prevista para perto do dia 24 de junho, promete prêmios ainda maiores, aquecendo o calendário lotérico nacional com um apelo cultural e festivo único.
Na noite de terça-feira, 9 de junho, a Quina realizou seu concurso 7046 e revelou a combinação vencedora — 37, 02, 68, 12 e 76 — às 21h, horário de Brasília. O sorteio foi transmitido ao vivo pelos canais oficiais da Caixa Econômica Federal, permitindo que qualquer apostador acompanhasse o resultado em tempo real.
As apostas, encerradas às 20h30, podiam ser feitas em lotéricas credenciadas, pelo internet banking da Caixa ou pelo portal oficial de loterias. O valor mínimo era de R$ 3,00 para cinco dezenas, mas apostadores mais ambiciosos podiam marcar até vinte números num único bilhete — opção que chegava a quase R$ 194 mil.
O prêmio de R$ 8,5 milhões foi distribuído segundo a lógica do jogo: 35% para quem acertasse as cinco dezenas, 15% para quatro acertos, e 10% tanto para três quanto para dois acertos. Esse escalonamento garante que mesmo resultados parciais possam render algum retorno.
O evento mais aguardado do calendário da Quina, porém, ainda está por vir: a Quina de São João, próxima ao dia 24 de junho, oferece prêmios muito superiores aos concursos regulares e já se consolidou como um momento especial na cultura lotérica brasileira. Para conferir resultados ou planejar apostas futuras, as páginas oficiais da Caixa seguem como referência definitiva.
The Quina lottery drew its numbers on Tuesday evening, June 9th, offering players a chance at 8.5 million reais. The winning combination—37, 02, 68, 12, 76—was announced at 9 p.m. Brasília time, broadcast live across Caixa Econômica Federal's social media channels and YouTube, where anyone with an internet connection could watch the draw unfold in real time.
For those still hoping to play, the betting window closed at 8:30 p.m., leaving only a narrow margin for last-minute entries. Tickets could be purchased at authorized lottery retailers across the country, through Caixa's internet banking platform for account holders, or via the federal bank's online lottery portal. The minimum wager was three reais, which bought a player five numbers of their choosing. Those willing to spend more could select up to twenty numbers in a single ticket, though that option carried a price tag of nearly 194,000 reais.
The prize structure reflected the game's design: thirty-five percent of the total purse went to anyone who matched all five numbers, while those who caught four numbers split fifteen percent. Matching three numbers earned ten percent of the prize pool, as did those who managed to hit just two. This tiered system meant that even partial success could yield a payout, though the real money sat at the top of the ladder.
The Quina operates on a regular schedule, but once a year the lottery shifts into a special gear. The Quina de São João, drawing near the feast day of Saint John on June 24th, carries substantially larger prizes than the standard weekly contests. That annual event has become something of a cultural fixture in Brazil's lottery calendar, drawing players who might otherwise skip the regular draws.
For those tracking results or planning future bets, Caixa's official lottery pages remain the authoritative source. The bank maintains detailed records of all drawings and prize distributions, making it straightforward for players to verify their tickets against the official numbers. Whether someone won on this particular Tuesday night would become clear once they checked their slip against the five numbers that emerged from the draw.
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does a lottery drawing in Brazil warrant news coverage? Isn't it just numbers?
Because millions of people play, and for some, it's genuinely consequential money. Eight and a half million reais is substantial. The draw itself is a public event—it's broadcast, it's official, it's part of how people in this country engage with chance and hope.
What's the difference between this regular draw and the São João version you mention?
Scale and tradition. The São João draw happens once a year, tied to a religious calendar, and the prizes are bigger. It's become an event people anticipate, not just another Tuesday night.
The minimum bet is three reais. That's quite cheap. Does that change who plays?
Absolutely. Three reais is accessible to almost anyone. You're not locked out by cost. That's part of why lotteries in Brazil reach across so many economic strata—the entry point is genuinely low.
You mention the prize structure—thirty-five percent to the five-number winners. Why break it down that way instead of just one big prize?
It keeps the game alive across different skill levels. Most people won't hit all five. But if you catch three or four, you still win something. It extends hope downward, makes the game feel less impossible.
The article mentions a lottery syndicate called Loteria Aldeota. Why include that?
It's advertising, honestly, but it also reflects how people actually play in Brazil. Syndicates and group betting are common. The article is acknowledging that real betting culture includes pooling money with others, not just individual tickets.