The jackpot rolled over on the night of the draw to £121 million and was won the following Tuesday by a single ticket holder from the UK. It rolled over three times before a Swiss player won the entire jackpot worth CHF183 million (£144 million). The Superdraw jackpot started at €130 million (£115 million) but was not won on the night. It was then won in the draw on Tuesday 19th February by one ticket holder in Ireland. The jackpot was not won on the night and it rolled over five times to reach €175 million (£152 million). The £115,726,000 jackpot was not won on the night, but rolled over to the following draw on Tuesday 11th June where a single UK ticket won £123,458,008. It was the first Superdraw to take place after the rules were updated to increase the jackpot cap to €200 million.Īs the jackpot for the draw on 4th October had already reached €190 million in a run of rollovers (€90 million more than the minimum guaranteed €100 million for the Superdraw), no additional funds were required to top up the Match 5 + 2 Lucky Stars prize fund. One Spanish ticket holder won a jackpot worth €130 million on the night. There was no winner on the night so the jackpot rolled over to the following draw, when a €144 million jackpot was won by one ticket holder from Valladolid in Spain. The Superdraw took place on Friday 3rd July and offered a guaranteed jackpot of €130,000,000. One anonymous ticket holder from Valladolid in Spain won the entire amount. The Superdraw took place on Friday 25th September and offered a guaranteed jackpot of €130 million. The jackpot rolled over on the night and continued until it reached the €200 million cap on 4th December, where it stayed for two more draws until finally being won by a ticket holder in France on 11th December. The jackpot reached its new cap of €210 million for the draw on 23rd February, where it remained until a Swiss ticket holder won the entire pot (CHF230.2 million) on Friday 26th February. No tickets matched all the numbers on the night so the top prize rolled over. The first Superdraw of 2021 took place on Friday 5th February and offered a jackpot of €130 million. It was the ninth-largest win ever seen in the UK and the lucky ticket holder contacted the National Lottery to claim their prize less than two days later.
The jackpot, worth €130 million (£111 million), was won on the night by someone in the UK. There were no tickets that matched all seven numbers on the night of the Superdraw, so the €130 million (£111 million) jackpot rolled over until it was eventually won at the record level of €220 million by a single ticket sold in France on 15th October.
The €130 million Superdraw rolled over on the night and was won in the next draw on Tuesday 7th December by a single ticket sold in León, Spain. This means another Superdraw will likely be announced in the near future.Ī UK player won the €130 million (£109 million) jackpot in the first Superdraw of 2022. On Tuesday 19th July, one lucky ticket sold in the UK matched all seven winning numbers to scoop the country's biggest ever lottery prize (£195.7 million).Ī €130 million Superdraw was due to take place on, however the jackpot had naturally reached a higher amount for the draw.
#Superdraw national lottery series
The €130 million Superdraw was not won on the night, resulting in a series of rollovers that took the jackpot to the limit (at the time) of €230 million. There were no tickets that matched all seven numbers on the night of the Superdraw, so the €130 million jackpot rolled over to the following draw. You can view a list of all previous EuroMillions Superdraws below, including the dates they took place, whether or not the jackpot was won in the draws and the jackpots offered.