In December 2008 e-lottery brought the Spanish lottery to its product range, affording participants globally a immensely improved opportunity of partaking in this super Spanish lotto prize fund.
If it’s the first time you have come across the Spanish Lotto, let me highlight just how crucial this lottery is to the big majority of the Spanish population. The Spanish lottery has been a national obsession in Spain for a long time with massive involvement generated by the Christmas lottery draw each year. Believe it or not 98 per cent of the population play this Spanish National lottery each Christmas.
There are a couple of great sound reasons why lot’s of Spanish subjects join in the Christmas Elgordo lotto draw.
First Of All, there is the incentive of the largest lottery prize fund of any world-wide lotto game – with over 2 Billion Euros! Second, there are in excess of 13,000 cash prizes to be won. Lastly, the probability of collecting a money prize in the Christmas draw are a highly achievable – one : six.
With the measure of interest thats devoted to the Christmas Elgordo lotto draw, a great deal of individuals are unaware that there are 5 extra Spanish Lotto draws every year too. These games occur on January, March, May, July and November. Despite the fact that these 5 lottery games don’t feature the huge prize fund of the Christmas draw, they are sizable all the same, ranging from seventy eight million Euros to six hundred and sixty six million Euros. Plus, these lottery games provide virtually 3 times as many prizes as the Christmas draw and odds of picking up a cash prize of an awesome 1 : 3.
The Christmas Spanish Lotto operates in an unusual way to almost all other world drawings. A full lottery ticket ‘billete’ is really pricey, costing two hundred Euros. However, these lotto tickets are broken up into 10 ‘decimos’ (tenths) costing twenty Euros apiece.
When purchasing your lottery tickets you have the choice of purchasing 1 decimo, a complete lottery ticket, or a part of a lottery ticket. If you don’t purchase the entire ticket, somebody else will buy the remainder of your ticket. E.g., when you purchase 2 decimos, someone else purchases 3 decimos and somebody else purchases five and your lotto ticket wins one thousand Euros, and then you will receive two hundred Euros, 300 Euros and five hundred Euros respectively. Owing to the expense of buying a whole lottery ticket, it is not unusual for households and acquaintances to united their lotto money and all buy a separate ‘decimo’ (tenth).