Federal Lottery Draw 6000: Winning Numbers for September 13

All prizes expire ninety days after the draw date
Winners must claim their Federal Lottery prizes within a strict timeframe or forfeit the money entirely.

Each Saturday evening in Brazil, a ritual of chance unfolds as the Federal Lottery draws five numbers and distributes half a million reais to the holder of a single ticket. Draw 6000, held on September 13th, continued this long-standing tradition — a modest but meaningful ceremony in which ordinary citizens briefly hold the possibility of transformation. The lottery's layered prize structure, rewarding not only exact matches but partial combinations, reflects a broader human tendency to find meaning and opportunity even in the margins of fortune.

  • Ticket 48602 claimed the R$500,000 top prize in draw 6000, while four additional winners took home amounts ranging from R$20,300 to R$35,000.
  • The draw's multi-tier structure creates urgency for thousands of players who may not realize they hold a winning partial combination.
  • A strict 90-day expiration window puts pressure on winners to act — unclaimed prizes are forfeited entirely, no exceptions.
  • Winners must navigate Caixa bank branches with valid ID and CPF, or use the app's QR code, to convert luck into cash before the clock runs out.

On the evening of Saturday, September 13th, Brazil's Federal Lottery conducted its 6000th draw at 7 p.m. Brasília time, awarding a top prize of R$500,000 to the holder of ticket 48602. Four additional prize tiers were distributed: ticket 01927 earned R$35,000, while 82187, 34246, and 68744 took home R$30,000, R$25,000, and R$20,300 respectively.

What distinguishes the Federal Lottery from simpler games of chance is its layered approach to winning. Beyond exact matches, players can claim prizes by matching partial combinations — the thousands, hundreds, or tens digits of any drawn number, or the unit digit of the first-prize number. A secondary path also exists for those whose final two digits fall just one position away from the tens digit of the top prize.

For winners, the path to collecting is clear but bounded by time. A visit to any Caixa branch with a national ID and CPF is sufficient, or online ticket holders may present the app-generated QR code. The critical detail: all prizes expire ninety days after the draw date, after which unclaimed winnings are lost.

Draw 6000 arrives in an unbroken line of weekly draws, each following the same structure — five prizes, a fixed R$500,000 top award, and a Saturday evening reveal. It is a quiet, recurring fixture in Brazilian life, one that briefly suspends ordinary routine and opens, for a few thousand people each week, the question of what might change.

On Saturday, September 13th, Brazil's Federal Lottery held its draw 6000, distributing prizes across five tiers with a top prize of half a million reais. The draw took place at 7 p.m. Brasília time, and the winning combination for the first prize—worth R$500,000—was 48602. The second prize went to ticket 01927, paying R$35,000. The third, fourth, and fifth prizes were claimed by tickets 82187, 34246, and 68744, worth R$30,000, R$25,000, and R$20,300 respectively.

The Federal Lottery operates on a structure that rewards not just exact matches but also partial combinations, giving players multiple ways to win. A ticket holder can claim a prize by matching any of the five main numbers drawn, or by matching just the unit digit of the first prize number. Beyond that, winners emerge from matching the thousands, hundreds, or tens digits of any of the five drawn numbers. There's also a secondary path: matching the final two digits if they fall within one position before or after the tens digit of the first prize number.

For those holding winning tickets, the process of claiming their prize is straightforward but time-sensitive. Winners can visit any Caixa bank branch with their national ID and tax registration number to collect their winnings. Those who purchased tickets online through the Caixa app have an alternative: they can present the QR code generated by the application to claim their prize. However, the window for claiming is narrow. All prizes from the Federal Lottery expire ninety days after the draw date, meaning winners must act within that timeframe or forfeit their money.

The draw 6000 follows a pattern established by previous weeks. The draw 5999, held the week before, had awarded its top prize of R$500,000 to ticket 58613, with secondary prizes distributed to 80546, 84932, 41386, and 72389. Going back further, draw 5998 crowned ticket 56975 as its first-prize winner, and draws 5997, 5996, and 5995 followed the same structure with their own winning combinations and prize distributions.

The consistency of the lottery's structure—five prizes per draw, with the first prize always set at R$500,000—has made it a familiar fixture in Brazilian gambling culture. Each Saturday at 7 p.m., thousands of players check their tickets against the newly announced numbers, hoping their combination matches one of the five drawn. For the ninety days following each draw, the possibility of claiming a prize remains open, creating a window during which luck, if it has struck, can still be converted into cash.

Players can claim prizes by visiting any Caixa bank branch with their national ID and tax registration number, or through the Caixa app using the QR code for online tickets
— Federal Lottery prize claim procedures
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Inventor

Why does the Federal Lottery matter enough to report on every single week?

Model

Because for millions of Brazilians, it's a real transaction—money they've spent, hope they've invested. When the numbers come out, some people's financial reality changes. The lottery is also a form of public revenue, so the draws themselves are news.

Inventor

The prize structure seems oddly specific. Why those exact amounts—R$500,000, then R$35,000, R$30,000?

Model

It's designed to distribute the pool across five winners per draw. The first prize is the headline, but the secondary prizes ensure more people win something. It keeps participation alive across different betting levels.

Inventor

What's the significance of the ninety-day deadline?

Model

It's a hard cutoff. After ninety days, the money reverts—likely back to the lottery fund or the state. It creates urgency. You can't sit on a winning ticket indefinitely. You have to act.

Inventor

Can someone actually win by matching just the last digit?

Model

Yes. That's the genius of the structure. You don't need the full five-digit number. Match the tens digit of any of the five main draws, or match it within one position of the first prize tens digit, and you have a prize. It means far more people walk away with something.

Inventor

Does the lottery publish how many people actually won each tier?

Model

Not in this report. We know the numbers drawn and the prize amounts, but not how many tickets matched each combination. That's information the lottery holds separately.

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