SuperEnalotto Betting in South Africa
SuperEnalotto is Italy's biggest lottery, famous worldwide for jackpots that climb without limit. It draws six numbers from a huge pool of 1 to 90 — far larger than most lotteries — four nights a week, and adds a Jolly number and an optional SuperStar. South Africans do not buy the Italian ticket; you place a fixed-odds bet, in rand, on the outcome through Lucky Numbers. Choose your numbers, set your stake, and your payout is locked at the odds shown when you bet. And because the draw is in the evening South African time, you can bet and see the result the same night.
| Numbers | 6 from a pool of 1–90 |
|---|---|
| Draw days | Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday |
| Extras | Jolly number, plus optional SuperStar |
| Jackpot | Uncapped — rolls over with no ceiling |
| How you play | Bet on the outcome at fixed odds, in rand |
SuperEnalotto guides and tools
- How to BetBet on Italy's SuperEnalotto from South Africa. Pick numbers from 1 to 90, set your stake and get paid at fixed odds in rand.
- Odds & PayoutsSuperEnalotto pays at fixed odds in rand. The huge 1 to 90 pool makes the full line among the longest odds in any lottery, with your payout locked.
- ResultsSuperEnalotto results give the six main numbers, the Jolly and SuperStar, the same evening SA time. Bets settle automatically at fixed odds.
- Jolly and SuperStarThe SuperEnalotto Jolly is a seventh ball for a second-tier prize, while SuperStar is an optional number that boosts wins. See how they work in rand.
- Biggest JackpotsSuperEnalotto carries the world's biggest rolling jackpots, with an uncapped rollover and a 1 to 90 pool building prizes past 100 million euros.
- Draw Days and TimesSuperEnalotto draws four nights a week, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings SA time. Bet earlier in the evening at fixed odds in rand.
- Hot and Cold NumbersSuperEnalotto hot and cold numbers show the most and least drawn balls from the 1 to 90 pool. A way to pick, not to beat random odds.
- PredictionsNo one can predict a random SuperEnalotto draw or sell you the winning numbers. Learn what number strategies really do before you bet in rand.
What SuperEnalotto is and how it works
SuperEnalotto is Italy's flagship lottery, drawn in Rome and known for some of the largest jackpots in the world. Six main numbers are drawn from a pool of 1 to 90 — one of the biggest pools in any major lottery — which is what makes the full line so rare and the jackpot so huge. A seventh ball, the Jolly number, is drawn for a second-tier prize, and there is an optional SuperStar number too. South Africans do not buy the Italian ticket; instead you place a fixed-odds bet, in rand, on which numbers will come up, choosing how many to back and your own stake. The payout is locked at the odds shown the moment you bet, and it settles the instant the official result is confirmed — the same evening, South African time.
SuperEnalotto draw times in South Africa
SuperEnalotto draws four nights a week, in the evening in Rome, which lands in the evening in South Africa too — so unlike the US draws there is no overnight wait. That is twice as many draws a week as most European lotteries.
| Draw days | South African time |
|---|---|
| Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday | Evening, around 20:00 to 21:00 |
The exact SA time shifts by an hour with European daylight saving. Betting closes before the draw, so place your bet earlier in the evening. More on the draw days and times page.
How to bet on SuperEnalotto
Betting takes three steps:
- Choose how many numbers to back — from a single number up to a full line of six from the 1 to 90 pool.
- Set your stake in rand.
- Confirm before betting closes; the bet settles automatically when the result is in that evening.
For the full rules and a worked example, see how to bet on SuperEnalotto.
SuperEnalotto bet types
The core choice is how many numbers you back, and each is its own fixed-odds market:
- 1 number — back a single number to be drawn; the most likely to land, the smallest payout.
- 2 to 5 numbers — all your picks must be among the six drawn; odds and payout climb with each number added.
- 6 numbers — back the full line; extremely rare from a 90-number pool, but the biggest fixed-odds payout.
The huge 1 to 90 pool means the full line pays big but lands very rarely, while smaller selections are more reachable. See SuperEnalotto odds and payouts for how each is priced.
SuperEnalotto odds and payouts
Betting on SuperEnalotto is fixed-odds, which is the key difference from buying the Italian ticket. When you place the bet, the odds — and so your exact payout if you win — are locked in, in rand. It does not matter how big the Italian jackpot is or how many people won; you are paid at your price, not from a shared euro pool. The 1 to 90 pool makes a full line of six among the longest odds in any lottery, so it pays the most but very rarely comes up; backing fewer numbers pays less but lands more often. The payout for each market is shown before you confirm. Full detail on the SuperEnalotto odds and payouts page.
The Jolly and SuperStar numbers
SuperEnalotto has two extra balls beyond the main six. The Jolly number is a seventh ball drawn from the same 1 to 90 pool, used in the Italian game to award a second-tier prize to players who matched five main numbers plus the Jolly. The SuperStar is a separate optional number, also from 1 to 90, that boosts prizes when it matches. Both are part of what makes SuperEnalotto distinctive. Read how they work on the Jolly and SuperStar page.
SuperEnalotto results
A SuperEnalotto result is the six main numbers plus the Jolly number, and the SuperStar where played, published the moment the official draw is done — the same evening, South African time. Because your bet is fixed-odds, it settles automatically against the official result the instant it lands, so there is no waiting and nothing to claim. Check the latest numbers and past draws on the SuperEnalotto results page.
SuperEnalotto jackpots and world records
This is what SuperEnalotto is famous for. Unlike the capped European draws, its jackpot is uncapped — when nobody matches the full six from ninety, it rolls over and grows with no ceiling, draw after draw, which has produced some of the largest lottery jackpots ever seen anywhere, well past a hundred million euros. Keep the distinction in mind when you bet online: you are not playing for that euro jackpot — you place a fixed-odds bet, in rand, whose payout is set when you bet. The giant Italian jackpot is the reason to watch, but your winnings come from your odds, not the rolling pool. See the biggest jackpots page for the record draws.
SuperEnalotto hot and cold numbers
'Hot' numbers are those drawn most often over a recent period; 'cold' numbers have come up least. With a 1 to 90 pool and four draws a week, the frequency lists move quickly, and plenty of players track them. Be clear-eyed about it, though: each SuperEnalotto draw is independent and random, so a number being hot or cold does not change its chance of being drawn next — a number missing for months is no more 'due' than any other. Hot and cold lists are a way to pick numbers, not a way to beat the odds. See how the frequencies work on the hot and cold numbers page.
SuperEnalotto predictions and number strategies
Search 'SuperEnalotto predictions' and you will find sites and groups claiming to know the next numbers. They cannot — a random draw has no pattern to read in advance, and anyone selling guaranteed picks is selling something that does not exist. What does exist are honest number strategies: using frequency stats, spreading picks across the big 1 to 90 range, or simply choosing numbers you like. None change the fixed odds, but they make picking more enjoyable. Read our straight take on SuperEnalotto predictions.
Betting on SuperEnalotto versus buying a ticket
This is the one thing to be clear on. Buying an official SuperEnalotto ticket means entering the Italian draw — something South Africans cannot easily do from here, and which would pay out in euros, overseas, subject to Italian rules. Betting on SuperEnalotto online through Lucky Numbers is different and far simpler: you place a fixed-odds bet, in rand, with a South African licensed bookmaker, on which numbers will be drawn. Your payout is set when you bet, not by the size of the Italian jackpot, and it settles automatically against the same official result, paid locally the same evening. It is the practical way for a South African to back the world's biggest rolling jackpot — CasinOnline offers the betting, not Italian ticket sales.
Why South Africans bet on SuperEnalotto
SuperEnalotto is the draw with the world's biggest uncapped jackpots, and betting on it lets a South African back it without any of the international hassle. There is no Italian ticket to buy, no euro account and no foreign payout to chase — you bet in rand, and you are paid in rand. The huge 1 to 90 pool lets you pick a steady short-odds single number or chase a long-odds full line, your payout is fixed and known before you bet, and the draw runs in the evening South African time, so unlike the US draws you can bet and see your result the same night. Add four draws a week — twice as many as most European lotteries — and it runs straight in your phone browser with no app to download.
Frequently asked questions
Can South Africans bet on SuperEnalotto?
Yes. You place a fixed-odds bet, in rand, on the outcome of the Italian draw through a South African licensed bookmaker. You are not buying an Italian ticket, and you are paid locally in rand.
What days and time is the SuperEnalotto draw in South Africa?
It draws four nights a week — Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday — in the evening in Rome, which lands in the evening in South Africa too, around 20:00 to 21:00 SAST. You can bet and see the result the same night.
How many numbers does SuperEnalotto draw?
Six main numbers from a large pool of 1 to 90, plus a Jolly number and an optional SuperStar number.
What are the Jolly and SuperStar numbers?
The Jolly is a seventh ball from the 1 to 90 pool that awards a second-tier prize in the Italian game; the SuperStar is a separate optional number that boosts prizes when matched.
Why are SuperEnalotto jackpots so big?
Because six numbers from 90 is one of the hardest full lines in any lottery, and the jackpot is uncapped, so it rolls over with no ceiling — producing some of the largest jackpots ever seen.
How are SuperEnalotto winnings paid out?
At fixed odds, in rand. Your payout is locked at the odds shown when you bet and settles the instant the official result is confirmed, paid to your South African balance — no euros or offshore transfer.
Are there SuperEnalotto numbers that win more often?
No. Each draw is independent and random, so hot and cold numbers are just historical frequency — they do not change which numbers come up next.
Where can I check SuperEnalotto results?
On the SuperEnalotto results page, which carries the six main numbers and the Jolly after each draw, available the same evening South African time.
Getting paid on a winning SuperEnalotto bet
You do not need an Italian ticket, a euro account or anyone overseas to collect on SuperEnalotto here — because you are placing a fixed-odds bet on the draw, not buying into the Italian game. Your payout is settled the moment the official result is confirmed, at the exact odds you took when you placed the bet, and it is paid in real-money rand straight to your balance. The size of the headline Italian jackpot does not change what you are paid; you are paid at your price, not from a shared euro pool overseas. The South African casinos CasinOnline reviews are licensed by the Northern Cape Gambling Board, so this is regulated local betting, and withdrawals are paid to South African bank accounts and methods without any offshore conversion — no exchange rates, no international transfer, no waiting on a foreign lottery to pay out. Better still, SuperEnalotto draws in the evening South African time, so a winning bet can settle the same night rather than overnight. Once your account is FICA-verified, the payout is processed quickly and directly to you. You can fund from as little as R1, back a few numbers or a full line of six, and bet in rand four nights a week. The same fixed-odds settlement applies to every lotto betting page on the site — you bet in rand on the result, and you are paid in rand.