The jackpot rolled over to twelve million reais
Na segunda-feira à noite, o sorteio 6827 da Quina não encontrou quem reunisse os cinco números sorteados — 1, 52, 53, 66 e 78 —, e o prêmio principal seguiu seu curso natural de acumulação, chegando a doze milhões de reais para a terça-feira. É a dinâmica própria dos jogos de azar coletivos: enquanto ninguém alcança o topo, o prêmio cresce como promessa adiada, e milhares de jogadores menores recebem pequenas recompensas que sustentam a esperança. A Quina, com seus seis sorteios semanais, é menos um evento e mais um ritmo — uma cadência regular entre o acaso e a expectativa humana.
- O jackpot de R$ 12 milhões acumula para a terça-feira após nenhum apostador acertar os cinco números do concurso 6827.
- Trinta e sete apostadores acertaram quatro números e levaram R$ 14.409,95 cada, enquanto mais de 96 mil pessoas dividiram prêmios menores.
- A estrutura de premiação distribui percentuais fixos do total arrecadado, o que significa que o valor real de cada prêmio varia conforme o volume de apostas e o número de ganhadores.
- O próximo sorteio acontece nesta terça-feira às 20h, mantendo a cadência diária que torna a Quina uma das loterias mais frequentes do Brasil.
O sorteio 6827 da Quina foi realizado na noite de segunda-feira, e os números 1, 52, 53, 66 e 78 não encontraram nenhum apostador que os tivesse marcado por completo. Com isso, o prêmio principal acumulou e chega a doze milhões de reais para o concurso de terça-feira.
A mecânica da Quina permite ao jogador escolher entre cinco e quinze números de um universo de oitenta, ou delegar a escolha à Surpresinha da Caixa Econômica Federal. Uma aposta mínima de cinco números custa três reais e oferece uma chance em 24 milhões de acertar o prêmio máximo; com quinze números, o custo sobe para nove reais e as chances melhoram para uma em oito mil.
Apesar de ninguém ter levado o prêmio principal, o dinheiro circulou pelos escalões inferiores: 37 apostadores acertaram quatro números e receberam R$ 14.409,95 cada; 3.405 pessoas acertaram três números e ganharam R$ 149,12; e 92.669 apostadores, o maior grupo, acertaram dois números e embolsaram R$ 5,47 por bilhete.
Para quem prefere jogar os mesmos números de forma contínua, a opção Teimosinha permite inscrever o mesmo bilhete em até 24 sorteios consecutivos. A Quina realiza seis sorteios por semana, de segunda a sábado, sempre às 20h — e uma vez por ano, por volta de 24 de junho, o concurso especial Quina de São João oferece prêmios maiores do que os sorteios regulares.
Na terça-feira à noite, o ciclo recomeça com o jackpot de doze milhões à espera de alguém que reúna os cinco números certos.
The Quina lottery drew its numbers on Monday evening, and once again, the jackpot rolled over. No one matched all five digits—1, 52, 53, 66, 78—which means the prize pool swelled to twelve million reais for Tuesday's drawing.
This is how the Quina works in Brazil: you pick between five and fifteen numbers from a pool of eighty, or you can let the Caixa Econômica Federal choose for you through their Surpresinha option. The more numbers you select, the higher your ticket costs and the better your odds, though "better" is relative. Choosing just five numbers costs three reais and gives you a one-in-24-million chance at the top prize. Pick all fifteen, and you'll pay nine reais per ticket with odds of one in eight thousand.
On Monday, while no one claimed the grand prize, the lottery still distributed money across the lower tiers. Thirty-seven players matched four numbers and each received fourteen thousand four hundred and nine reais and ninety-five centavos. Three thousand four hundred and five people got three numbers right, earning one hundred and forty-nine reais and twelve centavos each. The biggest group of winners—ninety-two thousand six hundred and sixty-nine people—matched just two numbers, collecting five reais and forty-seven centavos per ticket.
The prize structure is fixed by formula. Thirty-five percent of the total purse goes to anyone who hits all five numbers. Fifteen percent flows to the four-number winners, while ten percent each goes to those who match three or two numbers. This means the actual payout depends entirely on how many people won at each level and how much money was wagered overall.
The Quina draws six times a week, every day from Monday through Saturday at eight in the evening. It's one of Brazil's most frequent lotteries, which means there are constant opportunities to win and constant opportunities for the jackpot to grow. Once a year, usually around June 24th, there's a special Quina de São João draw with larger prizes than the regular contests.
For players who want to commit to the same numbers over time, there's the Teimosinha option—you can enter the same ticket in three, six, twelve, eighteen, or twenty-four consecutive drawings without having to buy a new one each time. It's a way of staying in the game without the repeated trips to the lottery counter.
Tuesday's draw will start fresh, with the twelve-million-real jackpot waiting for someone to match all five numbers. The odds haven't changed. The numbers will be drawn at eight in the evening, just like always.
Notable Quotes
No one matched all five numbers in Monday's draw— Quina lottery results
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does the jackpot grow so large when no one wins?
Because the money that would have gone to the five-number winner instead rolls into the next drawing. Every ticket sold feeds that pool, so it keeps accumulating until someone finally matches all five.
So the more people play without winning, the bigger the prize gets?
Exactly. It's a feedback loop. A larger jackpot attracts more players, which means more money in the pot, which makes the next jackpot even bigger if no one wins again.
What about those thirty-seven people who got four numbers? That's a decent prize.
It is—over fourteen thousand reais each. But they're still one number away from the life-changing amount. The lottery is designed so that most people who play will win something small. It keeps them coming back.
How often does someone actually win the jackpot?
With odds of one in twenty-four million for a five-number ticket, it's rare enough that the prize accumulates regularly. That's why you see these twelve-million-real jackpots. The draws happen six times a week, so there are plenty of chances, but also plenty of rollovers.
And the people who won with just two numbers—five reais each—is that even worth the ticket price?
The ticket costs three reais, so technically they made a small profit. But it's the illusion of winning. They'll probably buy another ticket next time.