The jackpot rolled forward untouched
No Brasil, onde a esperança se renova seis vezes por semana, o sorteio 7039 da Quina passou pelo sábado sem coroar nenhum vencedor do prêmio máximo. Os números 12, 15, 16, 67 e 80 foram sorteados em São Paulo, mas nenhum apostador os acertou por completo — e assim o prêmio segue seu curso natural de acumulação, crescendo até R$15 milhões para a segunda-feira. É a lógica antiga da loteria: a ausência de um vencedor não é fracasso, mas promessa adiada.
- O jackpot de R$15 milhões na segunda-feira transforma um sorteio rotineiro em um evento que ocupa o pensamento de milhares de brasileiros durante o fim de semana.
- Sessenta e quatro apostadores chegaram perto — quatro acertos cada um, R$9.591,81 de consolação — próximos o suficiente para sentir o peso do quinto número que faltou.
- Mais de 127.000 pessoas ganharam R$4,59 cada, um lembrete estatístico de que a loteria distribui muito mais esperança do que fortuna.
- O prazo de apostas se encerra às 19h de segunda-feira, e a Caixa Econômica Federal já recebe os bilhetes de quem decidiu que desta vez pode ser diferente.
No sábado à noite, em São Paulo, a Quina sorteou seus números — 12, 15, 16, 67 e 80 — e o prêmio máximo seguiu intacto. Nenhum apostador acertou os cinco dígitos, e o jackpot acumulou para R$15 milhões no próximo sorteio de segunda-feira.
Sessenta e quatro pessoas acertaram quatro números e receberão R$9.591,81 cada uma. Abaixo delas, a estrutura de prêmios se abre em camadas: 4.842 apostadores com três acertos ganham R$120,74, e 127.365 com dois acertos levam R$4,59. São esses prêmios menores — modestos, frequentes — que sustentam o hábito semanal de milhões de brasileiros.
A Quina funciona em ritmo constante: seis sorteios por semana, de segunda a sábado, sempre às 20h no horário de Brasília. As apostas podem ser feitas em lotéricas credenciadas ou pelo site da Caixa Econômica Federal até as 19h do dia do sorteio. O apostador escolhe entre cinco e quinze números de um universo de oitenta — e basta acertar dois para ganhar algo.
Para a maioria, o que existe é a possibilidade. O prêmio de R$15 milhões de segunda-feira já está esperando, e em algum lugar do Brasil alguém vai comprar um bilhete acreditando que pode ser o seu.
The Quina lottery drew its numbers on Saturday night in São Paulo, and once again, the jackpot rolled forward untouched. The five winning digits—12, 15, 16, 67, and 80—were pulled from the machine, but no one had matched all five. It happens often enough in a game where the odds are steep and the pool of players is vast.
Sixty-four people came close. They matched four of the five numbers and will each receive R$9,591.81 for their near-miss. Below them, the prize structure spreads out like a pyramid: 4,842 players matched three numbers and will get R$120.74 apiece, while 127,365 people matched just two numbers, earning R$4.59 each. These smaller wins are the bread and butter of the lottery—the reason people keep buying tickets week after week, even when the big prize stays locked away.
With no winner on Saturday, the jackpot accumulated. The next draw, scheduled for Monday, will now offer R$15 million to whoever finally gets all five numbers right. It's the kind of prize that makes people reconsider their usual betting patterns, that prompts a second trip to the lottery booth, that sits in the back of someone's mind through the weekend.
The Quina operates on a predictable rhythm. Six times a week—Monday through Saturday—the draw happens at 8 p.m. Brasília time. Players have until 7 p.m. to place their bets, either at authorized lottery retailers across the country or online through Caixa Econômica Federal, the state bank that runs the game. The mechanics are straightforward: pick between five and fifteen numbers from a field of eighty. Match two or more, and you win something. Match all five, and you win big.
For most players, the smaller prizes are what they'll ever see. The R$4.59 winners on Saturday—over 127,000 of them—are the statistical reality of how the lottery works. But the game persists because of the possibility, however remote, that the next draw could be different. Monday's R$15 million sits waiting, and somewhere in Brazil, someone will buy a ticket believing it could be theirs.
Notable Quotes
No one had matched all five numbers— Caixa Econômica Federal (draw results)
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does a lottery draw with no jackpot winner still make the news?
Because it's a public event with real money changing hands. Sixty-four people won nearly ten thousand reais each. Over a hundred thousand won something. The accumulation also matters—it signals that the next draw will be bigger, which changes how people think about playing.
So the story isn't really about failure, it's about the system continuing.
Exactly. The lottery is designed to keep rolling forward. No winner doesn't mean nothing happened. It means the machine worked as intended, money distributed to the lower tiers, and the incentive for the next draw just got stronger.
How many people actually play this game?
The source doesn't say, but you can infer from the numbers. Over 127,000 people matched two numbers on Saturday alone. That's just the smallest prize tier. The actual player base is enormous.
Is there anything surprising in these results?
Not really. The Quina is structured so that most draws won't produce a jackpot winner. That's the design. What's notable is the consistency—six draws a week, same time, same rules, year after year. It's a rhythm people depend on.
What happens to all that money that doesn't go to winners?
The source doesn't address that. But in most lotteries, a portion goes to the state, some to retailers, some to the next draw. The system feeds itself.