What Do You Favour the Spanish Lottery or the Euro Lottery

On December 2008 elotto added the Spanish lottery to its product range, giving players globally a vastly improved opportunity of partaking in this tremendous Spanish lottery prize fund.

If it’s the first time you have come across the Spanish Lotto, let me highlight simply how important this lotto is to the vast majority of the Spanish population. The Spanish lotto has been a national obsession in Spain for a very long time with massive involvement generated by the Christmas lotto draw each year. Believe it or not ninety-eight% of the population play this Spanish National lottery each Christmas.

There are a few primary reasons why so many Spanish subjects join in the Christmas Elgordo draw.

Firstly, on that point is the inducement of the largest lottery prize fund of any worldwide lotto game - 2.20 Billion Euros! Secondly, there are in excess of thirteen thousand cash prizes to be won. Lastly, the probability of picking up a cash prize on the Christmas draw are a highly attainable - 1 : 6.

With the quantity of interest that is afforded to the Christmas Elgordo lottery draw, a good deal of individuals are oblivious that there is five extra Spanish Lottery draws every year too. These lottery games occur in November, March, May, July and January. Even though these 5 games do not feature the giant prize fund of the Christmas lotto draw, they are big however, ranging from seventy eight million Euros to six hundred and sixty six million Euros. Plus, these games provide nearly 3 times as many prizes as the Christmas lottery draw and betting odds of collecting a money prize of an staggering one : three.

The Christmas Spanish lottery works in an unusual way to almost all other worldwide lotteries. A whole ticket ‘billete’ is very dear, costing two hundred Euros. However, these lotto tickets are broken up into ten ‘decimos’ (tenths) costing twenty Euros each.

When buying your tickets you have the option of purchasing one decimo, a complete lottery ticket, or a part of a ticket. If you don’t buy the full lottery ticket, someone else will buy the rest of your ticket. For example, when you buy two decimos, somebody else buys 3 decimos and somebody else buys five and your lotto ticket wins 1000 Euros, and then you will collect two hundred Euros, 300 Euros and 500 Euros respectively. Owing to the expense of buying a whole lottery ticket, it is not uncommon for families and acquaintances to amalgamate their lotto cash and each purchase a separate ‘decimo’ 10th.

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