Quina 7043: um ganhador leva R$ 19,3 milhões

One ticket holder matched all five numbers and claimed nearly twenty million reals
The Quina 7043 drawing on June 5, 2026 produced a single jackpot winner in Brazil.

Na noite de sexta-feira, 5 de junho de 2026, um único apostador no Brasil atravessou a fronteira estatística mais improvável do jogo — uma em 24 milhões — e emergiu com R$ 19,3 milhões ao acertar os cinco números do concurso Quina 7043. O sorteio, realizado às 21h no Espaço da Sorte em São Paulo, é mais um capítulo na longa tradição humana de depositar esperança em bolas numeradas, enquanto milhares de outros apostadores celebraram vitórias menores, provando que a fortuna raramente cai em um único lugar.

  • Um único bilhete transformou seu portador em milionário da noite para o dia, com um prêmio de R$ 19.311.291,98 — resultado de acertar exatamente os números 10, 20, 21, 29 e 46.
  • A tensão do sorteio se distribuiu por todo o país: mais de 179 mil apostadores aguardavam os resultados com algum grau de esperança, e a grande maioria saiu com ao menos R$ 4,39 na mão.
  • Os prêmios secundários amenizaram a concentração da sorte — 86 pessoas ganharam mais de R$ 9 mil cada, e outros 7.282 levaram cerca de R$ 103, criando uma rede ampla de contemplados.
  • O próximo concurso, Quina 7044, já está agendado para sábado, 6 de junho, às 21h, com as probabilidades retornando ao seu patamar implacável de uma chance em 24 milhões para a aposta mínima.

Na noite de 5 de junho de 2026, às 21h, o Espaço da Sorte em São Paulo foi palco do sorteio da Quina 7043. Transmitido ao vivo pelo canal do YouTube da Caixa e pelo portal G1, o momento em que as cinco bolas revelaram os números 10, 20, 21, 29 e 46 selou o destino de um apostador sortudo: o único acertador do quíntuplo garantiu um prêmio de R$ 19.311.291,98.

A Quina é a terceira loteria mais popular do Brasil, atrás apenas da Mega-Sena e da Lotofácil. Uma aposta mínima de cinco números custa três reais e oferece uma chance em 24 milhões de levar o jackpot — odds piores que a Timemania, mas melhores que a Mega-Sena. Quem quiser aumentar as probabilidades pode apostar em mais números, pagando proporcionalmente mais.

O vencedor principal não esteve sozinho na celebração. Oitenta e seis apostadores acertaram quatro números e receberam R$ 9.235,38 cada; 7.282 acertaram três e levaram R$ 103,87; e 171.935 pessoas acertaram dois números, garantindo R$ 4,39 por bilhete. Esse sistema de prêmios em cascata garante que cada sorteio distribua alegria em múltiplas camadas.

Apostar na Quina pode ser feito em casas lotéricas, pelo site oficial das Loterias Caixa, pelo aplicativo para iOS e Android, ou pelo internet banking da Caixa. As apostas encerram às 20h no dia do sorteio. Para resgatar prêmios acima de R$ 2.428,80, é necessário comparecer a uma agência Caixa com documento de identidade, CPF e o comprovante original. Valores acima de R$ 10 mil são processados em até dois dias úteis, e os ganhadores têm 90 dias para reclamar — após esse prazo, os recursos não resgatados vão para o FIES.

O próximo sorteio, concurso 7044, acontece no sábado, 6 de junho, às 21h, horário de Brasília. As apostas já estão abertas, e as probabilidades voltam ao seu patamar habitual. Em algum lugar no Brasil, alguém já está escolhendo seus números.

On Friday night, June 5th, 2026, someone in Brazil became nearly twenty million reais richer. The Quina 7043 drawing took place at 9 p.m. in São Paulo's Espaço da Sorte, broadcast live as always through Caixa's YouTube channel and the G1 news site. When the five balls fell—10, 20, 21, 29, 46—one ticket holder had matched them all, securing a prize of R$ 19,311,291.98.

The Quina, Brazil's third most popular lottery after Mega-Sena and Lotofácil, operates on simple mathematics and long odds. A basic five-number ticket costs three reals. The chance of winning the jackpot with that minimum bet sits at one in 24 million—worse odds than Timemania but better than Mega-Sena's one in 50 million. Those who want to improve their chances can select six numbers instead, paying eighteen reals and shifting the odds to one in 4 million. The game allows players to choose anywhere from five to twenty numbers, with prices scaling accordingly.

But the single winner was not alone in celebrating. Thousands of other bettors had matched some portion of the drawn numbers and claimed smaller prizes. Eighty-six people matched four of the five numbers, each receiving R$ 9,235.38. Another 7,282 matched three numbers and took home R$ 103.87 each. The largest group—171,935 people—matched just two numbers, enough to win R$ 4.39 per ticket. These cascading prize tiers mean that while the jackpot is rare, the lottery generates winners across multiple levels with every drawing.

Players can place bets through several channels. The traditional route remains the lottery retailer, where customers select their numbers on a physical ticket and pay cash or use Pix, debit, or credit cards. The digital path has expanded considerably: the official Loterias Caixa website accepts bets, as does the mobile app available for both iOS and Android. Caixa bank customers can also place wagers through their internet banking accounts. Betting closes at 8 p.m. on the day of the drawing, giving players a window to participate before the balls are drawn.

Claiming prizes follows a tiered system based on amount. Winnings up to R$ 2,428.80 can be collected at any authorized lottery retailer or Caixa branch. Larger amounts require a trip to a Caixa agency with identification, CPF documentation, and the original betting receipt. Prizes of R$ 10,000 or more are processed within two business days. Winners have ninety days from the drawing date to claim their money; after that window closes, unclaimed funds transfer to FIES, the federal student loan financing program.

The next Quina drawing, contest 7044, is scheduled for Saturday, June 6th at 9 p.m. Brasília time. The previous drawing on June 3rd produced the numbers 10, 13, 25, 36, and 60. The lottery runs daily, with results stretching back through May and into late spring. For those who missed Friday's drawing or want another chance, the betting windows open again, and the odds reset to their familiar one-in-24-million baseline. The machine will turn, the balls will fall, and somewhere in Brazil, someone will be checking their ticket.

The Quina is Brazil's third most popular lottery, behind only Mega-Sena and Lotofácil
— Loterias Caixa
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

Why does a single lottery winner matter enough to report on?

Model

Because it's the moment when probability becomes a person. Twenty million reals changes a life. The news isn't really about the numbers—it's about the fact that someone held the right ticket.

Inventor

But thousands of people won smaller prizes that same night. Why do we focus on the one?

Model

That's the shape of lotteries. The jackpot is the story because it's the dream. The others won money, yes, but the one person who matched all five numbers—that's the rare event. It's also the hook that makes people read, that makes them think about their own chances.

Inventor

What's the actual probability someone wins?

Model

One in 24 million on a basic ticket. That's worse than being struck by lightning in most years. But millions of people play, so someone eventually wins. The Quina draws every single day.

Inventor

How does someone actually claim that much money?

Model

They need to go to a Caixa bank branch with their ID, CPF, and the original ticket. The bank processes it within two business days. But they have ninety days to claim it—after that, the money goes to student loan financing.

Inventor

Is there a reason the lottery exists at all?

Model

It's a state-run game. The money that doesn't go to prizes funds public programs. It's also entertainment—people spend three reals knowing they probably won't win, but knowing someone will.

Inventor

What happens next?

Model

The next drawing is tomorrow night. The odds reset. Millions of people will buy tickets again, and the cycle continues.

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