The jackpot rolled over. No one matched all five numbers.
Na sexta-feira à noite, o Brasil assistiu mais uma vez ao ritual semanal da Quina: cinco números sorteados, nenhum bilhete contemplado com o prêmio máximo. O que era uma promessa de R$11,6 milhões permanece em aberto, crescendo para R$13 milhões no sorteio seguinte — um lembrete de que a loteria é, antes de tudo, uma conversa entre a esperança humana e a improbabilidade matemática. Dezenas de apostadores se aproximaram, mas ninguém chegou até o fim.
- Nenhum apostador acertou os cinco números 02, 31, 39, 64 e 73 no concurso 7038, deixando o prêmio principal intocado pela mais recente sexta-feira.
- O acúmulo não é fracasso coletivo, mas tensão acumulada: R$13 milhões esperam no sorteio de sábado, pressionando a expectativa de milhares de novos apostadores.
- Quarenta e oito pessoas chegaram perto — quatro acertos cada uma, R$11.650,55 no bolso — enquanto mais de 3.200 levaram prêmios menores de três acertos.
- Quase 93 mil apostadores acertaram apenas dois números e receberam R$5,73 — valor simbólico que, para muitos, serve exatamente para financiar a próxima tentativa.
- O concurso 7039 acontece neste sábado, 30 de maio, com apostas encerradas às 20h e sorteio ao vivo às 21h na RedeTV e no canal da Caixa no YouTube.
O 7038º concurso da Quina foi realizado na noite de sexta-feira, e o prêmio principal acumulou mais uma vez. Os números sorteados — 02, 31, 39, 64 e 73 — não coincidiram com nenhum bilhete completo entre os milhares de apostadores que tentaram a sorte. O prêmio estimado em R$11,6 milhões segue sem dono e chega a R$13 milhões para o próximo sorteio.
A Quina funciona com uma lógica simples e implacável: é preciso acertar os cinco números para levar o prêmio máximo. Nesta sexta, 48 apostadores chegaram perto — quatro acertos cada um, rendendo R$11.650,55 por bilhete. Outros 3.230 acertaram três números e receberam R$164,89. Quase 93 mil pessoas acertaram dois números e levaram R$5,73 — o suficiente, talvez, para apostar de novo.
O jogo é um dos mais acessíveis do país: cinco números escolhidos entre oitenta disponíveis, com bilhete mínimo a R$3. Os sorteios acontecem de segunda a sábado, sempre às 21h, com apostas encerradas uma hora antes. Quem ganhar prêmios menores pode resgatar em casas lotéricas ou agências da Caixa; valores acima de R$10 mil exigem apresentação pessoal com documento de identidade, CPF e bilhete original.
O concurso 7039 acontece neste sábado. Em algum lugar do Brasil, alguém vai acompanhar o sorteio pela televisão ou pelo celular, com cinco números na cabeça e R$13 milhões na imaginação. A maioria não vai ganhar. Mas o jogo continua — sustentado, semana após semana, pela matemática simples da esperança.
The Quina lottery drew its 7038th numbers on Friday night at nine o'clock, and the jackpot rolled over. The five numbers pulled from the machine—02, 31, 39, 64, 73—matched no one's ticket completely. What had been an estimated 11.6 million reais in prize money now sits unclaimed, growing to 13 million for the next drawing.
This is how the Quina works in Brazil: you need all five numbers to win the top prize. Miss even one, and you move down the ladder. On this particular Friday, thousands of people did exactly that. Forty-eight tickets matched four of the five numbers, each winning 11,650 reais and change. Another 3,230 people got three numbers right, collecting 164.89 reais apiece. Nearly 93,000 more matched just two numbers and received 5.73 reais—enough to buy another ticket, perhaps, if they felt lucky.
The lottery runs six days a week in Brazil, Monday through Saturday, with drawings always at nine in the evening. The Quina is one of the country's most accessible games: you pick five numbers from eighty available, and a simple ticket costs three reais. The more numbers you choose beyond the minimum five, the better your odds, though the cost rises accordingly. Betting closes at eight in the evening on the day of the draw, giving people a one-hour window to get their tickets in.
For those who do win, the process of claiming money depends on the amount. Smaller prizes—anything under 2,428.79 reais—can be collected at any authorized lottery retailer or at a Caixa bank branch. Winners who played online can even have their winnings transferred to their Mercado Pago account. Larger prizes require a trip to Caixa itself, where you'll need to present your original ID with CPF number and your original winning ticket. For prizes of 10,000 reais or more, payment arrives within two business days of presenting yourself at a branch.
The next drawing, number 7039, happens on Saturday, May 30th. The accumulated pot of 13 million reais will be waiting. Somewhere in Brazil, someone will be watching the RedeTV broadcast, or checking the Caixa YouTube channel, or refreshing their phone to see if their numbers came up. Most will not win. But the game continues, drawing people back, week after week, with the simple mathematics of hope.
Notable Quotes
The Quina of today accumulated. The estimated prize for the next Quina drawing is 13 million reais.— Caixa lottery results
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does the jackpot accumulate when no one wins? Is that how it's designed?
Yes. The Quina is built on that principle—if nobody matches all five numbers, the money doesn't disappear. It rolls forward to the next draw, growing larger each time. It's what keeps people coming back.
So the prize was 11.6 million, and now it's 13 million. Where does that extra money come from?
From ticket sales. Every ticket sold feeds the prize pool. When no one wins, that week's sales get added to what was already waiting. The pool grows until someone finally matches all five.
Forty-eight people won over 11,000 reais each. That's real money. Does that feel like a consolation prize to them?
It depends on perspective. For someone who spent three reais on a ticket, 11,650 is substantial. But it's also a reminder of how close they came to 13 million. That gap—between four numbers and five—is the entire game.
How often does the jackpot actually get won?
The source doesn't say. But you can infer from the fact that it's already accumulated to 13 million that it's been rolling for a while. The longer it accumulates, the more people play, hoping to be the one who breaks the streak.
What's the appeal of a game where most people lose money?
The same appeal as any lottery everywhere. For three reais, you get to imagine what 13 million reais would change. That's what people are really buying.