Quina 7046: prêmio de R$ 8,5 mi acumula sem ganhador na terça

Nearly a hundred thousand bets won just over five reais each
The Quina 7046 drawing produced thousands of smaller winners even as the jackpot went unclaimed.

No one claimed the jackpot when the Quina lottery's 7046th drawing concluded on the night of June 9th, 2026, in São Paulo — and so the prize, now grown to eight and a half million reais, passes quietly into the next day, waiting. Lotteries have always been a mirror of collective hope: thousands of Brazilians matched fragments of the winning sequence and took home modest sums, while the larger fortune remains suspended, patient, for whoever arrives with the right five numbers on Wednesday night.

  • R$8.5 million sat unclaimed after no bettor matched all five numbers in the June 9th Quina drawing, sending the jackpot rolling forward.
  • The tension is mathematical and human at once — odds of one in twenty-four million stand between each player and a life-changing sum.
  • Thousands found partial consolation: 40 people won over R$13,000 each, nearly 99,000 won small amounts, keeping the ritual of hope alive across the country.
  • The prize accumulates for Wednesday's Quina 7047 drawing, scheduled for 9 PM on June 10th, drawing fresh waves of bettors toward the same long odds.
  • Entry remains deliberately accessible — R$3 minimum, available at lottery shops nationwide or through Caixa's digital platforms — lowering the threshold while the jackpot climbs higher.

The 7046th Quina drawing came and went on Tuesday, June 9th, 2026, without producing a jackpot winner. As it does every evening at 9 p.m., the draw unfolded at the Espaço da Sorte in São Paulo — broadcast live for anyone watching — and the eight and a half million reais that had been accumulating simply stayed where it was. No one had matched all five numbers.

The prize now rolls into Wednesday's drawing, Quina 7047, scheduled for the same hour on June 10th. It is a familiar rhythm in Brazil's lottery culture: the money waits, the odds remain steep at one in twenty-four million for a standard R$3 bet, and the pool grows more tempting with each passing night.

The drawing was not without its smaller victories. Forty bets matched four of the five numbers, each earning just over R$13,000. More than 3,400 players got three numbers right and took home around R$143. Nearly 99,000 bets matched two numbers for a modest R$5 each — the quiet, steady rewards that keep millions of Brazilians engaged even when the grand prize slips away.

Betting on the Quina is designed to be frictionless: lottery shops across the country accept Pix, cards, and cash, while Caixa's website and mobile app bring the game to anyone with a phone. Claiming winnings follows a tiered process — smaller prizes at any authorized shop, larger ones requiring a visit to a Caixa branch with identification and the original receipt. Winners have ninety days to collect; after that, unclaimed funds flow to Brazil's federal student loan program.

The eight and a half million reais will be waiting again on Wednesday night.

The Quina lottery drawing on Tuesday, June 9th, 2026, came and went without a jackpot winner. The event unfolded as it always does—at 9 p.m. in the Espaço da Sorte in São Paulo, broadcast live on Caixa's YouTube channel and on G1—but this time the eight and a half million reais that had been accumulating stayed in the pool. No one had matched all five numbers.

What this means is that the prize rolls forward. The next drawing, scheduled for Wednesday, June 10th at the same hour, will now offer a pot of eight and a half million reais to whoever manages to pick the correct five digits from the eighty available. It's the kind of outcome that happens regularly in lotteries: the money sits, untouched, waiting for luck to arrive.

But the drawing wasn't entirely without winners. Thousands of people had bet on the Quina and caught at least some of the numbers. Forty bets matched four of the five digits, each winning just over thirteen thousand reais. Three thousand four hundred ninety-three people got three numbers right and took home a hundred and forty-three reais each. Nearly a hundred thousand bets matched two numbers and won just over five reais apiece. These smaller prizes are the bread and butter of the Quina—the reason people keep playing even when the jackpot eludes them.

The Quina itself occupies a particular place in Brazil's lottery landscape. It ranks third in popularity, behind only the Mega-Sena and the Lotofácil, yet it's considerably harder to win than either of those. A single five-number bet costs three reais and carries odds of one in twenty-four million. If you're willing to spend eighteen reais and pick six numbers instead, your chances improve to one in four million—still long, but better. The game sits fourth among Brazilian lotteries in terms of difficulty; only the Timemania, the Mega-Sena, and the +Milionária demand longer odds.

Betting on the Quina has become routine. You can walk into any lottery shop across the country and fill out a slip, choosing anywhere from five to twenty numbers. Most shops now accept Pix, credit cards, and debit cards. If you prefer to stay home, you can bet through the Caixa Lotteries website, through the mobile app available on iOS and Android, or—if you're a Caixa customer—through the bank's internet banking platform. The barrier to entry is low; the barrier to winning is steep.

For those who do win, the redemption process depends on the amount. Prizes up to two thousand four hundred twenty-eight reais can be claimed at any authorized lottery shop or at a Caixa branch. Anything above that requires a trip to a Caixa agency with your ID, CPF, and the original betting receipt. Prizes of ten thousand reais or more are paid within two business days. Players have ninety days from the drawing to claim their winnings; after that, unclaimed money goes to FIES, the federal student loan fund.

The next chance comes Wednesday night. The eight and a half million reais will be waiting.

The Quina ranks third in popularity among Brazilian lotteries, behind only the Mega-Sena and the Lotofácil, yet is considerably harder to win than either
— Lottery analysis
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

Why does a lottery drawing with no jackpot winner still make the news?

Model

Because it's a public event with real money attached. People bet on it, some win smaller amounts, and the prize grows. It's worth reporting what happened and what comes next.

Inventor

But eight and a half million reais—that's a lot of money sitting there. Does it ever feel like the odds are designed to keep people playing?

Model

The odds are what they are: one in twenty-four million for the jackpot. That's mathematically true whether you're playing or not. What's interesting is that thousands of people still win something, even when no one wins everything. The smaller prizes keep the game alive.

Inventor

How many people are we talking about? The ones who won something on Tuesday?

Model

Over a hundred thousand bets won at least something. Forty won significant money—over thirteen thousand each. But ninety-nine thousand won five reais or less. That's the shape of it: a few big winners, a vast base of tiny ones.

Inventor

And the money that didn't get won—it just rolls to the next drawing?

Model

Yes. It accumulates. That's what makes people keep playing. The pot grows until someone finally matches all five numbers. It could be next week. It could be months.

Inventor

What's the longest you've seen a Quina jackpot go without a winner?

Model

The source doesn't say. But you can see from the recent drawings that it's been accumulating at least since early June. The pattern repeats: draw, no winner, roll forward, draw again.

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