SuperEnalotto Biggest Jackpots
SuperEnalotto is famous for some of the largest lottery jackpots ever, thanks to an uncapped rollover and a huge number pool. Here is why the prizes get so enormous — and an honest note on what it means when you bet in rand.
An uncapped rollover and a 1 to 90 pool
Two things make SuperEnalotto jackpots so big. First, six numbers from a pool of 90 is one of the hardest full lines in any lottery, so the jackpot is rarely hit. Second — and unlike the capped EuroMillions and EuroJackpot — the jackpot is uncapped: when nobody wins, it rolls over and grows with no ceiling, draw after draw, four times a week. That combination has produced record jackpots well past a hundred million euros, among the largest seen anywhere in the world.
Records versus betting at fixed odds
Keep the distinction clear. That record jackpot belongs to the official Italian ticket draw — a euro prize paid overseas. When you bet on SuperEnalotto online through Lucky Numbers, you are not playing for that pool; you place a fixed-odds bet, in rand, whose payout is set when you bet. The giant Italian jackpot is why the draw is worth watching, but your winnings come from your odds, paid locally. See the SuperEnalotto guide for how betting works.
Frequently asked questions
Why does SuperEnalotto have the biggest jackpots?
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 — building some of the world's largest prizes.
Is the SuperEnalotto jackpot capped?
No. Unlike EuroMillions and EuroJackpot, it has no cap, so it can roll over and grow indefinitely until someone hits the full six.