Quina 7008: dois ganhadores levam R$ 16,4 mi cada; próximo sorteio tem prêmio de R$ 600 mil

Two people won, the pool was distributed, and the next draw starts fresh
The Quina draw 7008 did not accumulate, meaning the jackpot was claimed and the next prize resets.

Na quinta-feira, dois bilhetes dividiram o prêmio máximo da Quina no concurso 7008, transformando uma sequência de cinco números — 14, 23, 47, 55 e 78 — em mais de R$16 milhões para cada ganhador. Em meio à rotina semanal de um dos jogos de loteria mais populares do Brasil, o resultado foi limpo e definitivo: sem acúmulo, sem suspense prolongado. A sorte, quando chega, raramente anuncia sua visita.

  • Dois apostadores acertaram os cinco números do concurso 7008 e cada um levou R$16,48 milhões — uma divisão rara que dobrou a alegria sem diminuir a fortuna.
  • Quase 178 mil apostas foram premiadas ao todo, revelando que a loteria distribui esperança em camadas, do jackpot milionário ao prêmio simbólico de R$4,42.
  • Com o prêmio principal distribuído integralmente, a Quina não acumulou — o ciclo se encerra e recomeça sem herança de sorte não reivindicada.
  • Na sexta-feira, um novo concurso se abre com prêmio estimado em R$600 mil, lembrando que o jogo, por natureza, nunca para.

Na quinta-feira à noite, o concurso 7008 da Quina revelou seus números — 14, 23, 47, 55 e 78 — e dois apostadores saíram com R$16,48 milhões cada. Não houve acúmulo: o prêmio foi inteiramente distribuído, encerrando o ciclo com precisão.

Além dos dois grandes vencedores, o sorteio premiou outras faixas. Noventa e seis apostas acertaram quatro números e receberam R$8.236,55 cada. Outros 7.374 apostadores acertaram três números e ganharam R$102,12 apiece. Na faixa mais ampla, 170.049 bilhetes com dois acertos garantiram R$4,42 — somando quase 178 mil apostas premiadas no total.

A Quina funciona com regras simples: o jogador escolhe entre cinco e quinze números de um universo de oitenta. Um bilhete de cinco números custa R$3 e tem odds de um em 24 milhões; ampliar a seleção aumenta o custo, mas melhora as chances. Há ainda a Surpresinha, em que a Caixa Econômica Federal escolhe os números pelo apostador, e a Teimosinha, que permite participar de até 24 concursos consecutivos com o mesmo bilhete.

Os sorteios acontecem de segunda a sábado, às 21h. O próximo concurso, na sexta-feira, oferece prêmio estimado em R$600 mil — uma nova janela aberta para quem quiser tentar a sorte antes do horário limite.

Two lottery tickets split the Quina jackpot on Thursday evening, with each winner claiming just over R$16.4 million. The draw, known as concurso 7008, produced the winning sequence: 14, 23, 47, 55, and 78. It was a clean result—no accumulation, no carryover to the next drawing.

Beyond the two jackpot winners, the lottery distributed prizes across four tiers of matching numbers. Ninety-six tickets matched four of the five numbers and each received R$8,236.55. The third tier was far more crowded: 7,374 people matched three numbers, collecting R$102.12 apiece. At the broadest level, 170,049 tickets matched just two numbers and won R$4.42 each. In total, the draw rewarded nearly 178,000 bets across all prize categories.

The Quina operates on a straightforward structure. Players select between five and fifteen numbers from a pool of eighty. A five-number ticket costs R$3 and carries odds of one in 24 million. As players add more numbers to their selection, the cost rises—a fifteen-number ticket runs R$9,009—but the odds improve proportionally, down to one in 8,005. The lottery also offers Surpresinha, where the Caixa Econômica Federal, which administers the game, selects the numbers randomly on the player's behalf.

The prize pool is divided by tier. Thirty-five percent goes to those who match all five numbers, fifteen percent to four-number matches, and ten percent each to three-number and two-number matches. Players can also enter Teimosinha, a subscription option allowing the same ticket to compete in three, six, twelve, eighteen, or twenty-four consecutive drawings without repurchasing.

The Quina draws six times weekly, Monday through Saturday at 9 p.m. There is also an annual special draw called Quina de São João, held near June 24th, which offers substantially larger prizes than regular concursos. Friday's next drawing carries an estimated prize of R$600,000, available to anyone who purchases a ticket before the 9 p.m. draw time.

The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

Why does it matter that the lottery didn't accumulate this time?

Model

Because accumulation is what builds the massive jackpots people dream about. When no one wins the top prize, the money rolls forward and grows. This time it didn't—two people won, the pool was distributed, and the next draw starts fresh at a modest R$600,000.

Inventor

R$16.4 million each—is that considered a large prize for the Quina?

Model

It's substantial, yes. But the Quina's real appeal is its frequency and accessibility. You can play for R$3. The lottery draws six times a week, so there's always another chance coming. The big money is rare; most people win small amounts or nothing.

Inventor

What's the difference between playing five numbers and playing fifteen?

Model

Cost and odds. Five numbers costs R$3 but you're betting against 24 million possible combinations. Fifteen numbers costs R$9,009 but your odds drop to one in 8,005. You're buying probability with money.

Inventor

Who actually plays this game?

Model

Brazilians across income levels. The R$3 entry point makes it accessible to people with modest means. The weekly draws keep it in the cultural conversation. It's a small bet on a large change.

Inventor

Does anyone ever win consistently?

Model

No. That's the nature of lottery. What exists is the structure—the tiers, the percentages, the odds published openly. The Caixa controls the draw. But whether your ticket wins on any given Thursday or Friday is pure chance.

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