SuperEnalotto Odds and Payouts
Betting on SuperEnalotto is fixed-odds, so your payout is set the moment you place the bet — in rand, not by the size of the Italian jackpot. Here is how the pricing works and what each market pays.
How fixed odds work
When you bet, the odds for your chosen numbers are locked in, and so is your exact payout if you win. It does not matter how big the Italian jackpot is or how many people backed the same numbers — you are paid at your price, in rand, not from a shared euro pool. This is the core difference from buying the Italian ticket.
The big 1 to 90 pool
SuperEnalotto's pool of 90 numbers is one of the largest in any lottery, so a full line of six is among the longest odds you can bet — it pays the most but very rarely comes up. Smaller selections are more reachable but pay less. The huge pool is exactly why the jackpots get so big, and why the payout for each market is worth checking before you confirm. New to it? See how to bet on SuperEnalotto.
Frequently asked questions
Why are SuperEnalotto odds so long on a full line?
Because you are matching six numbers from a pool of 90, one of the largest in any lottery, which makes the full line among the hardest — and highest-paying — bets you can place.
Is my payout affected by the Italian jackpot size?
No. Because you bet at fixed odds in rand, your payout is set when you place the bet, regardless of the Italian jackpot or how many people win.