Quina 7039: números sorteados no sábado com prêmio de R$ 13 milhões

Five balls fell into place: 12, 15, 16, 67, and 80.
The winning numbers from Saturday's Quina 7039 draw, with a thirteen million real prize pool at stake.

Six nights a week, Brazil's Quina lottery transforms five numbered balls into a question about fortune and chance. On Saturday, the 7039th such draw produced the numbers 12, 15, 16, 67, and 80, with thirteen million reais awaiting whoever holds the matching ticket. It is a ritual as old as hope itself — a three-real wager against long odds, renewed each evening at nine o'clock.

  • Thirteen million reais hung in the balance Saturday night as Quina draw 7039 unfolded live on RedeTV and Caixa's digital channels at nine o'clock sharp.
  • The winning combination — 12, 15, 16, 67, 80 — now sits uncelebrated or quietly celebrated by someone who may not yet fully grasp what they hold.
  • Claiming the prize is not automatic: winners must present identity documents and original receipts at a Caixa branch, with larger payouts requiring up to two business days to process.
  • The cycle does not pause — draw 7040 arrives Monday, June 1st, with betting closing at 8pm, resetting the possibility for millions of players across the country.

Saturday night at nine o'clock, the Quina lottery completed its 7039th draw. Five balls settled into place — 12, 15, 16, 67, and 80 — with a prize pool of thirteen million reais behind them. Somewhere, someone may be holding a ticket that matches.

The game itself is simple: choose five numbers from eighty, pay three reais, and wait. Matching even two numbers yields a prize; matching all five can change a life. Draws happen six days a week, always broadcast live, always at the same hour.

What happens next depends on the size of the win. Smaller prizes can be collected at any authorized lottery house or Caixa branch — or transferred digitally for those who bet online. Larger amounts require a visit to a Caixa agency with identity documents and the original receipt in hand. Prizes above ten thousand reais are processed within two business days of that visit.

The draw before this one, on Friday the 29th, had its own five numbers. The one before that, its own. Each draw is a fresh iteration of the same ritual — a small weekly act of hope for most, and occasionally, for one person, something far more consequential. Draw 7040 follows on Monday, June 1st.

Saturday night at nine o'clock, the Quina lottery drew its 7039th numbers. Five balls fell into place: 12, 15, 16, 67, and 80. The prize pool sitting behind those numbers was thirteen million reais—a sum that would reshape someone's life, if the odds broke their way.

The Quina is a straightforward game. You pick five numbers from eighty available. A ticket costs three reais. Match two numbers and you win something. Match three, four, or all five, and the payout climbs. The draw happens six days a week, Monday through Saturday, always at nine in the evening, always broadcast live on RedeTV and through Caixa's channels on YouTube and Facebook. If you want to play, you have until eight o'clock on the day of the draw to place your bet.

For anyone holding a winning ticket from Saturday's draw, the next step depends on how much money they've won. Small prizes—anything under 2,428.79 reais—can be claimed at any authorized lottery house or at a Caixa bank branch. Those who bet online have an additional option: they can transfer their winnings directly to a Mercado Pago account. Larger prizes, from 2,428.80 reais up, require a trip to a Caixa branch. You'll need to bring your original identity document with your CPF number and the original betting receipt. For prizes of ten thousand reais or more, Caixa has two business days to process the payment once you've presented yourself at an agency.

The previous draw, on Friday the 29th, had produced different numbers: 02, 31, 39, 64, 73. Before that, on Wednesday the 28th, the winning combination was 09, 26, 42, 55, 66. The pattern continues backward through the month—each draw its own set of five numbers, each one a fresh chance for someone to win. The draw scheduled for Monday, June 1st, will be the 7040th iteration of this cycle.

For most people who play, the lottery is a small weekly ritual. Three reais, five numbers chosen by intuition or habit or a lucky date. The odds are long. But on Saturday night, someone somewhere might have matched all five. That person now holds a ticket worth thirteen million reais, waiting to walk into a Caixa branch and claim it.

Prizes of R$ 10,000 or more are paid within two business days from presentation at a Caixa agency
— Caixa lottery prize redemption policy
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

Why does a lottery draw warrant this much coverage? It happens six times a week.

Model

Because someone might have won thirteen million reais. That's not routine—that's life-changing. The publication is serving the people who played, who need to know if they won.

Inventor

But the article doesn't say whether anyone actually won the jackpot. It just lists the numbers.

Model

That's the honest part. The draw happened. These were the numbers. Whether the prize accumulated or was claimed—that information may not be available yet, or it may come later. The publication reports what it knows.

Inventor

So readers come here hoping to see their numbers, not to read a story.

Model

Exactly. But they also come for the practical information—how to claim a prize, when the next draw is, where to watch it live. The article serves both needs at once.

Inventor

Does anyone actually win the full jackpot?

Model

Sometimes. But most weeks, the prize rolls over. That's how it grows to thirteen million. The longer no one matches all five, the bigger the pool gets.

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