Quina 6828: um ganhador leva R$ 11,7 milhões com cinco acertos

One ticket matched all five numbers in Tuesday's draw
A single winner claimed 11.7 million reais in Brazil's Quina lottery, preventing the jackpot from rolling over.

Na terça-feira à noite, um único bilhete transformou a sorte em fortuna no sorteio 6828 da Quina, ao acertar os cinco números — 53, 54, 62, 66 e 77 — e levar para casa mais de R$ 11,7 milhões. Em um país onde a loteria funciona como ritual semanal de esperança coletiva, a premiação máxima sem acúmulo representa não apenas o fim de um ciclo, mas o recomeço de outro: na quarta-feira, um novo prêmio estimado em R$ 600 mil já aguarda seus pretendentes.

  • Um único bilhete acertou os cinco números do sorteio 6828 e embolsou R$ 11.715.102,56 — encerrando o acúmulo de uma só vez.
  • Outros milhares de jogadores também foram premiados: 44 acertaram quatro números, 3.725 acertaram três, e quase 100 mil levaram prêmios menores com dois acertos.
  • Por não ter acumulado, o próximo sorteio começa do zero — com prêmio estimado em apenas R$ 600 mil, uma fração do valor que acabou de ser distribuído.
  • A Quina opera seis vezes por semana, com regras acessíveis e opções que vão do bilhete mínimo de R$ 3 até apostas com quinze números que multiplicam as chances de ganho.

Na terça-feira à noite, um único bilhete acertou os cinco números do sorteio 6828 da Quina — 53, 54, 62, 66 e 77 — e garantiu ao seu portador a quantia de R$ 11.715.102,56. O jackpot, que poderia ter acumulado para o próximo concurso, foi inteiramente reivindicado por esse vencedor solitário.

O sorteio também distribuiu prêmios em outras faixas: 44 apostadores acertaram quatro números e receberam R$ 12.447,61 cada; 3.725 acertaram três e levaram R$ 140,03; e 99.560 bilhetes com dois acertos garantiram R$ 5,23 apiece. A estrutura de premiação da Quina destina 35% do total arrecadado ao prêmio principal, com o restante dividido proporcionalmente entre as demais categorias.

A Quina é uma das loterias mais acessíveis do Brasil. Os jogadores escolhem entre cinco e quinze números de um universo de oitenta, com o bilhete mínimo custando R$ 3 e oferecendo odds de um em 24 milhões. Quem opta por quinze números paga R$ 9 e melhora as chances para um em oito mil. Há ainda a opção Surpresinha, em que a Caixa Econômica Federal escolhe os números automaticamente.

Com o prêmio máximo zerado, o próximo sorteio — marcado para quarta-feira às 20h — começa com estimativa de R$ 600 mil. A loteria realiza seis concursos semanais, de segunda a sábado, e conta ainda com a Quina de São João, sorteio especial anual com prêmios muito superiores aos dos concursos regulares.

On Tuesday evening, a single lottery ticket matched all five numbers in Brazil's Quina draw, claiming a prize of just over 11.7 million reais. The winning combination—53, 54, 62, 66, 77—emerged from the weekly drawing, and the ticket holder will receive R$ 11,715,102.56. The draw, numbered 6828, produced winners across multiple prize tiers, though the jackpot remained unclaimed until this ticket arrived.

Beyond the single grand prize winner, the draw distributed smaller prizes to thousands of other players. Forty-four tickets matched four of the five numbers, each earning R$ 12,447.61. The third prize tier saw 3,725 winning tickets with three correct numbers, worth R$ 140.03 each. At the lowest prize level, 99,560 tickets matched two numbers and received R$ 5.23 apiece. The fact that someone won the top prize means the jackpot did not roll over to the next drawing—a significant outcome in lottery terms, as accumulated prizes can grow substantially larger.

The Quina operates as one of Brazil's most accessible lotteries. Players select between five and fifteen numbers from a pool of eighty, with the cost and odds of winning varying based on how many numbers they choose. A minimum five-number ticket costs three reais and carries odds of one in 24 million. Those willing to play more numbers can increase their chances: a fifteen-number ticket costs nine reais and improves the odds to one in eight thousand. The lottery also offers Surpresinha, where the Caixa Econômica Federal—the state bank that administers the game—selects the numbers automatically.

Prize distribution follows a fixed formula. The jackpot pool receives 35 percent of total prize money, with the remaining funds divided among lower prize categories: 15 percent for four-number matches, and 10 percent each for three-number and two-number matches. This structure ensures that even players who miss the jackpot have a reasonable chance of recovering their stake or winning modest amounts.

The lottery draws six times weekly, every day from Monday through Saturday at 8 p.m. The next drawing is scheduled for Wednesday, with an estimated jackpot of R$ 600,000. Beyond regular draws, the Quina also holds an annual special drawing called Quina de São João, held near June 24th, which offers significantly larger prizes than routine contests. For players seeking consistency, the Teimosinha option allows the same ticket to compete across three, six, twelve, eighteen, or twenty-four consecutive draws without requiring a new purchase each time.

The Quina did not accumulate after draw 6828
— Caixa Econômica Federal (lottery administrator)
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

What makes someone actually win the Quina? Is it pure chance, or are there patterns people follow?

Model

It's entirely chance—the lottery draws five numbers from eighty, and the odds are brutal. One in 24 million for the minimum bet. People do look for patterns, birthdays, lucky numbers, but the machine doesn't care. This winner on Tuesday just had the right five numbers come up.

Inventor

So 11.7 million reais—that's a life-changing amount in Brazil?

Model

Absolutely. That's generational wealth for most people. But it also means this one person took home what 99,560 other people split at the lowest prize level. The lottery is designed so the house always wins, but occasionally someone gets the whole thing.

Inventor

Why do people keep playing if the odds are so terrible?

Model

Because the cost is low—three reais for a chance at millions—and the dream is real. You see 3,725 people won something on Tuesday. Most lost money, but they won something. That's enough to keep people coming back.

Inventor

The next draw has a smaller jackpot. Why?

Model

Because this one didn't accumulate. When someone wins the top prize, the next draw starts fresh. If no one had won Tuesday, the Wednesday prize would have been much larger. The money builds up until someone claims it.

Inventor

Does the Quina de São João actually pay more, or is that marketing?

Model

It genuinely does. It's a special annual draw with a larger prize pool. It's the lottery's version of a special event, and people do treat it differently—more tickets sold, bigger payouts.

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