One person in Osasco claimed millions while 88,420 others won pocket change
Em meio à rotina de milhões de apostadores brasileiros, um único bilhete em Osasco transformou cinco números sorteados numa quinta-feira em mais de R$ 4,5 milhões — lembrança de que a fortuna, quando se manifesta, costuma escolher um só endereço. O concurso 7014 da Quina, realizado pela Caixa Econômica Federal, distribuiu prêmios por quatro faixas distintas, tocando desde o ganhador solitário do prêmio máximo até os quase 90 mil apostadores que acertaram apenas dois números. A loteria, como sempre, cumpriu seu papel duplo: alimentar o sonho individual e financiar, por lei, políticas públicas coletivas.
- Um único apostador em Osasco acertou os cinco números — 11, 16, 23, 42 e 74 — e levou sozinho R$ 4.565.710,48, enquanto milhares dividiram prêmios menores nas faixas inferiores.
- A ausência de ganhador no concurso anterior foi o que fez o prêmio acumular e chegar ao patamar de R$ 4,5 milhões, mecanismo que agora já projeta R$ 6 milhões para o próximo sorteio.
- Mais de 88 mil apostadores que acertaram dois números receberam apenas R$ 4,38 cada — a tensão entre a amplitude da participação e a concentração do prêmio máximo fica evidente nos números.
- O próximo concurso, marcado para 2 de maio, já acumula R$ 5.252.928,55 e promete renovar o ciclo de expectativa para quem não ganhou desta vez.
- Ganhadores têm 90 dias para resgatar seus prêmios; após esse prazo, os valores não reclamados são transferidos ao tesouro nacional — o tempo, aqui, também é parte das regras do jogo.
Na quinta-feira, a Caixa Econômica Federal realizou o sorteio do concurso 7014 da Quina no Espaço da Sorte, em São Paulo, e os números 11, 16, 23, 42 e 74 definiram o destino de um apostador em Osasco, na Grande São Paulo. Ele foi o único a acertar as cinco dezenas e recebeu exatamente R$ 4.565.710,48 — valor ligeiramente superior à estimativa inicial de R$ 4,5 milhões.
O prêmio não ficou restrito ao topo: 74 apostadores que acertaram quatro números levaram R$ 5.499,90 cada; 4.202 pessoas com três acertos receberam R$ 92,24; e 88.420 apostadores que acertaram dois números foram contemplados com R$ 4,38. A receita total do concurso somou R$ 8.851.605,00.
Para resgatar prêmios, as regras variam conforme o valor: quantias abaixo de R$ 2.259,20 podem ser retiradas em qualquer lotérica, enquanto valores maiores exigem comparecimento a uma agência da Caixa com documento de identidade, CPF e o bilhete original — ou comprovante eletrônico, no caso de apostas pelo aplicativo. O prazo é de 90 dias; após isso, o dinheiro vai para o tesouro nacional.
O prêmio havia crescido porque nenhum apostador acertou todas as dezenas no concurso anterior — é esse mecanismo de acumulação que faz os jackpots da Quina aumentarem progressivamente. O próximo sorteio está previsto para sábado, 2 de maio, com prêmio estimado em R$ 6 milhões e um acumulado já confirmado de R$ 5.252.928,55. Uma aposta simples de cinco números custa R$ 3,00, com chances de um em mais de 24 milhões de acertar o prêmio máximo.
On Thursday, Caixa Econômica Federal drew the numbers for Quina lottery contest 7014, and a single bettor in Osasco, in the greater São Paulo region, walked away with the jackpot. The winning combination was 11, 16, 23, 42, and 74—five numbers pulled from the machines at the Espaço da Sorte in São Paulo and broadcast across the institution's social media channels. The prize, initially estimated at R$ 4.5 million, paid out exactly R$ 4,565,710.48 to the sole person who matched all five digits.
The draw's structure meant that while one person claimed the top prize, thousands of others won smaller amounts across the lower tiers. Seventy-four bettors matched four numbers and each received R$ 5,499.90. The next tier down saw 4,202 people win R$ 92.24 apiece for three correct numbers. The broadest group—88,420 bettors who matched two numbers—took home R$ 4.38 each. Across all these winners and all the tickets sold, the total revenue generated by the contest reached R$ 8,851,605.00.
For anyone holding a ticket, the process of claiming a prize depends on the amount won. Smaller prizes, those under R$ 2,259.20, can be collected at any lottery retailer. Anything above that threshold requires a trip to a Caixa branch, where the bettor must present a photo ID and their tax registration number. The original ticket or, for online and app-based bets, the electronic receipt is mandatory. The window to claim is ninety days from the draw date; after that, unclaimed money transfers to the national treasury.
The jackpot in this contest had grown to R$ 4.5 million because the previous drawing produced no winner in the top tier. This accumulation mechanism is how lottery prizes swell over time—each time no one matches all five numbers, the money rolls forward to the next contest. The next Quina draw is scheduled for Saturday, May 2, with an estimated jackpot of R$ 6 million and an official accumulated amount of R$ 5,252,928.55 already in the pool.
For those considering playing, a simple five-number bet costs R$ 3.00. Players can mark up to fifteen numbers on a single ticket to increase their odds, though the probability of matching all five with a basic wager remains steep—one in 24,040,016. The lottery also offers features like Surpresinha, which randomly selects numbers for you, and Teimosinha, which repeats your chosen numbers across multiple draws. Official betting pools allow groups to split costs and multiply their chances by pooling money together.
Part of every lottery's revenue is directed by law toward education, public safety, and health initiatives, with specific percentages allocated to each sector. Results remain available immediately after the draw through Caixa's official channels and the national lottery website, giving bettors quick access to check their tickets and confirm whether they hold a winning combination.
Notable Quotes
Prizes above R$2,259.20 can only be claimed at Caixa branches; smaller amounts can be collected at lottery retailers— Caixa Econômica Federal prize claim rules
Winners have 90 days to claim their prize; after that, unclaimed money goes to the national treasury— Caixa Econômica Federal regulations
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does a single lottery winner in one city matter enough to report?
Because it's concrete proof that someone's life just changed. Four and a half million reais is not abstract—it's a person in Osasco who now has to decide what to do with it. The lottery is also a tax on hope, and the draw itself is a moment where thousands of people simultaneously learn whether they won or lost.
What strikes you about the prize distribution across all the tiers?
The shape of it. One person gets millions. Seventy-four get thousands. Thousands more get pocket change. It's a pyramid, and most people are at the bottom. But those 88,420 people who won R$ 4.38 each—they still won. They still have to go claim it, even if it's barely worth the trip.
The ninety-day deadline—why does that matter?
Because it's a hard stop. If you win and forget, or lose your ticket, or life gets in the way, the money doesn't wait. It goes to the government. There's something almost cruel about that, but it's also the rule everyone agrees to when they buy the ticket.
Does the next draw being bigger change how people think about this one?
It might. Some people see a jackpot that just hit and think the odds are worse now. Others see the next one accumulating and think that's where the real money will be. But the math doesn't change—the odds are the same every time.
What does the money that doesn't go to winners actually do?
By law, it funds schools, police, hospitals. So even if you lose, your money is supposed to go somewhere that matters. That's the story the lottery tells itself, anyway.