The odds remain what they've always been.
Mais uma vez, o destino não encontrou seu destinatário: o sorteio 7027 da Quina encerrou sem que ninguém acertasse os cinco números, e o prêmio segue acumulado, crescendo como uma promessa adiada. Na segunda-feira, R$ 10,5 milhões estarão à espera de alguém que consiga alinhar acaso e escolha — uma façanha que a matemática torna improvável, mas que a esperança humana insiste em perseguir. Enquanto isso, mais de 127 mil apostadores levaram algo para casa, lembrando que, em jogos de sorte, há muitas formas de ganhar e ainda mais formas de quase ganhar.
- Nenhum apostador acertou os cinco números do sorteio 7027 — 24, 27, 34, 44 e 47 — e o jackpot escapou mais uma vez das mãos de todos.
- O prêmio acumulado salta para R$ 10,5 milhões, criando uma tensão crescente que se renova a cada sorteio sem vencedor.
- Ainda assim, 89 pessoas acertaram quatro números e embolsaram R$ 5.866,85 cada, enquanto mais de 122 mil ganharam ao menos R$ 4,08 com dois acertos.
- A Caixa Econômica Federal mantém o ritmo com seis sorteios semanais e oferece o serviço Teimosinha para quem quer apostar nos mesmos números de forma automática.
- Na segunda-feira à noite, o sorteio 7.028 abrirá uma nova janela — e as probabilidades, que variam de 1 em 8.005 a 1 em 24 milhões, permanecerão exatamente as mesmas.
O sorteio de sábado da Quina terminou sem vencedor do prêmio principal. Os números 24, 27, 34, 44 e 47 foram sorteados, mas nenhuma aposta os reuniu por completo — e assim o jackpot não se esvaziou, mas cresceu. Na segunda-feira, o prêmio acumulado chegará a R$ 10,5 milhões.
O dinheiro, porém, não ficou parado. Oitenta e nove apostadores acertaram quatro números e receberam R$ 5.866,85 cada. Outros 5.378 acertaram três e ganharam R$ 92,46. Quase 122 mil pessoas acertaram dois números e levaram R$ 4,08 — uma quantia modesta, mas suficiente para lembrar que mais de 127 mil bilhetes premiados circularam naquele sorteio.
A lógica da Quina é simples: escolha entre cinco e quinze números de um universo de oitenta. Quanto mais números, maior o custo e melhores as chances — mas "melhores" é uma palavra que precisa de contexto. Com cinco números, você paga três reais e enfrenta uma chance em 24 milhões. Com quinze, paga nove reais e reduz as odds para uma em oito mil. A distribuição dos prêmios segue uma fórmula fixa: 35% para quem acerta tudo, 15% para quatro acertos, e 10% cada para três e dois acertos.
Para quem prefere não depender da memória ou da disciplina, a Caixa oferece o Teimosinha — um serviço que repete automaticamente os mesmos números por até 24 sorteios consecutivos. Uma forma de delegar a esperança ao calendário.
A Quina realiza sorteios seis vezes por semana, sempre às 21h, exceto aos domingos. O próximo será o de número 7.028. O prêmio espera. As probabilidades não mudam.
Saturday's Quina draw came and went without a jackpot winner. The five numbers—24, 27, 34, 44, 47—matched no one's ticket completely, which meant the prize pool swelled instead of emptying. By Monday's draw, the accumulated jackpot will sit at R$ 10.5 million, waiting for someone to finally get all five right.
The money had to go somewhere, though. Eighty-nine players matched four of the five numbers and each walked away with R$ 5,866.85. A much larger group—5,378 people—got three numbers correct, earning R$ 92.46 apiece. And then there were the nearly 122,000 players who matched just two numbers, each receiving R$ 4.08. In total, more than 127,000 tickets won something, even if most of those somethings were small.
Quina operates on a straightforward math. Players choose between five and fifteen numbers from a pool of eighty. The more numbers you pick, the higher your cost and the better your odds—though "better" is relative. Choosing just five numbers costs three reais but gives you a one-in-24-million chance at the jackpot. Pick all fifteen, and you'll pay nine reais but improve your odds to one in eight thousand. The house always structures these games so that most players lose most of the time.
The prize distribution follows a fixed formula. Thirty-five percent of the total prize goes to anyone who matches all five numbers. Fifteen percent goes to the four-number winners, and ten percent each to those who match three or two. This means the jackpot's size depends entirely on how many tickets were sold and how many people won in the lower tiers—a calculation that shifts with every draw.
Monday's draw will be the 7,028th in the Quina's history. The lottery runs six times a week, every day except Sunday, always at nine in the evening. Most draws accumulate like this one did, with the jackpot growing until someone finally breaks the streak. There's also a special annual draw called Quina de São João, held near June 24th, which offers larger prizes than the regular contests.
For those who want consistency without having to buy a ticket every time, Caixa Econômica Federal—the bank that administers the lottery—offers Teimosinha, a subscription service where the same numbers play automatically for three, six, twelve, eighteen, or twenty-four consecutive draws. It's a way of saying: I believe in these numbers, so let them work for me while I'm not thinking about it.
The next chance comes Monday. The jackpot is waiting. The odds remain what they've always been.
Notable Quotes
The lottery runs six times a week, every day except Sunday, always at nine in the evening.— Caixa Econômica Federal (lottery administrator)
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does the jackpot accumulate when no one wins? Doesn't that seem designed to keep people playing?
It's exactly designed for that. The prize pool grows until someone wins, which means each draw without a winner makes the next draw more tempting. It's the engine of the whole system.
So 127,000 people won something on Saturday. That sounds like a lot of winners.
It is, but most of them won almost nothing. R$ 4.08 for matching two numbers—that's less than the cost of the ticket. The system is structured so that small wins feel like wins, even when you've lost money overall.
What kind of person plays Quina regularly?
The source doesn't say, but you can infer it from the structure. It's accessible—three reais for a basic ticket. It's frequent—six draws a week. It's designed for people who can afford to lose small amounts repeatedly and who hold onto the possibility that one day they won't.
Is there anything unusual about this particular draw?
No. This is ordinary. No jackpot winner, money accumulates, lower-tier prizes distribute, next draw happens Monday. It's the rhythm of the lottery—most draws look exactly like this one.
What are the actual odds someone should care about?
If you play five numbers, you're looking at one in 24 million. Even picking all fifteen numbers only gets you to one in 8,000. Those aren't odds that reward regular play. They're odds that reward luck, and luck doesn't care how often you try.