One ticket matched all five numbers; the jackpot did not roll over.
Na terça-feira, um único apostador brasileiro converteu cinco números sorteados em mais de R$4,4 milhões — um desses momentos em que o acaso, entre dezenas de milhares de participantes, escolhe apenas uma pessoa. O concurso 6834 da Quina encerrou seu ciclo sem acumulação, distribuindo prêmios em cascata por milhares de ganhadores menores antes de virar a página para a próxima rodada. A loteria, administrada pela Caixa Econômica Federal, segue seu ritmo semanal ininterrupto, lembrando que a esperança se renova seis vezes por semana.
- Um único bilhete acertou os cinco números — 11, 41, 51, 78 e 79 — e levou sozinho o prêmio integral de R$4.499.272,54.
- A ausência de acumulação encerra o suspense deste ciclo, mas imediatamente desloca a expectativa para o próximo concurso.
- Além do grande vencedor, 21 apostadores faturaram R$17.855 cada, e mais de 63 mil pessoas receberam prêmios menores, mostrando que a sorte se distribui em camadas.
- A Caixa já projeta R$5 milhões para o concurso 6835 de quarta-feira, reacendendo o interesse de milhões de apostadores em todo o Brasil.
Na noite de terça-feira, um único apostador acertou os cinco números do concurso 6834 da Quina — 11, 41, 51, 78 e 79 — e embolsou R$4.499.272,54. Por ter apenas um ganhador no topo, o prêmio não acumulou para o próximo sorteio.
O concurso também gerou uma cascata de prêmios menores: 21 apostadores com quatro acertos receberam R$17.855,02 cada; 2.277 acertaram três números e levaram R$156,82; e 60.935 jogadores com dois acertos ganharam R$5,86. A estrutura de premiação da Quina distribui percentuais fixos do total arrecadado entre cada faixa de acerto.
A Quina é uma das loterias mais acessíveis do Brasil. Um bilhete simples de cinco números custa três reais, com odds de um em 24 milhões. Quem escolhe quinze números paga nove reais e reduz drasticamente as chances contra si. O jogo ainda oferece a Surpresinha, em que a Caixa escolhe os números pelo apostador, e a Teimosinha, que permite concorrer com o mesmo bilhete por até 24 sorteios consecutivos.
Com o prêmio desta rodada já distribuído, as atenções se voltam para quarta-feira. A Caixa estima que o concurso 6835 pagará R$5 milhões — e o ciclo recomeça, como acontece seis vezes por semana, toda semana.
On Tuesday evening, a single bettor walked away from Brazil's Quina lottery with R$4.4 million in hand. The winning ticket matched all five numbers drawn in contest 6834: 11, 41, 51, 78, and 79. The prize—R$4,499,272.54 to be exact—went to one person alone, an outcome that meant the jackpot did not roll over to the next drawing.
Beyond the solitary winner at the top, the draw produced a cascade of smaller victories across thousands of other players. Twenty-one bettors matched four of the five numbers and each received R$17,855.02. The third tier of winners—those who correctly picked three numbers—numbered 2,277 people, with each collecting R$156.82. At the bottom rung, 60,935 players matched two numbers and took home R$5.86 apiece. The Quina's prize structure distributes winnings proportionally: 35 percent of the total pool goes to five-number matches, 15 percent to four-number matches, 10 percent to three-number matches, and another 10 percent to two-number matches.
The Quina operates as one of Brazil's most accessible lotteries. Players select between five and fifteen numbers from a field of eighty, with the cost of a ticket rising as more numbers are chosen. A five-number ticket costs three reais and carries odds of one in 24 million. Those willing to bet more can improve their chances: a fifteen-number ticket costs nine reais and reduces the odds to one in eight thousand. The lottery also offers the Surpresinha option, where the Caixa Econômica Federal—the state bank that administers the game—selects the numbers on the player's behalf. For those who want to commit to the same numbers over time, the Teimosinha feature allows a single ticket to compete in three, six, twelve, eighteen, or twenty-four consecutive drawings.
The Quina draws six times weekly, every Monday through Saturday at 8 p.m. The lottery also features a special annual draw called the Quina de São João, held near June 24th, which offers substantially larger prizes than regular contests. This special draw has become a fixture in Brazil's lottery calendar, drawing heightened interest around the saint's feast day.
With the jackpot claimed and no accumulation heading into the next round, attention now turns to Wednesday's drawing. The Caixa estimates the prize pool for contest 6835 will reach R$5 million, offering the next set of hopeful players a chance at a significant payout. The lottery's steady rhythm—six draws a week, consistent rules, and the occasional windfall—keeps millions of Brazilians engaged in the game of chance.
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does it matter that one person won instead of the jackpot rolling over?
When one ticket wins the top prize, the money leaves the system. If nobody had won, that R$4.4 million would have been added to the next drawing, making Wednesday's pot even larger. Players are always hoping for accumulation—it's what draws them in.
How many people actually won something in this draw?
Roughly 63,000 tickets won money across all four prize tiers. Most of them won very little—the 60,000-plus people who matched just two numbers got less than six reais back. But they still won. That's the lottery's design: many small winners, few big ones.
What's the appeal of the Teimosinha feature?
It's convenience and commitment. You pick your numbers once and let them ride for months. Some people believe in their numbers, or they just like the simplicity of not having to choose every week. It's a way of staying in the game without constant decision-making.
Is R$5 million for the next draw considered a large jackpot?
It's moderate. The Quina's prizes fluctuate based on ticket sales and whether the previous draw accumulated. The special São João draw, held once a year, offers substantially more. But R$5 million is enough to change someone's life—it's the kind of number that keeps people buying tickets.