1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Spain's Christmas lottery winners share €2.4 billion

December 22, 2019

Spain's "El Gordo," or "the Fat One," is the world's largest lottery, giving out billions of euros every year to millions of winners. The Christmas lottery tradition goes back more than 200 years.

https://p.dw.com/p/3VEsz
Spanien, Alicante: Menschen feiern in der Lotterieverwaltung Nummer 3 in Alcoy
Image: Imago/M. Guillen

Winners of Spain's El Gordo Christmas lottery celebrated Sunday as the lucky numbers were announced live on national television.

In total, nearly €2.4 billion ($2.66 billion) will be paid out to people who bought tickets, the organizers said, adding that this year Spaniards spent more than €2.9 billion ($3.21 billion) on lottery tickets.

The lotto is split between 170 sets of 100,000 tickets, which each cost €200.

The top prize in each set is €4 million — allowing kiosks in cities including Madrid, Barcelona and Seville to sell the winning number to 170 people.

Spain's TVE reported that a single lottery office in the resort town of Salou in the northeast Catalan region, shared out €320 million in prizes.

World's richest lottery

"El Gordo," or "The Fat One," is considered the richest raffle in the world by total prize value.

But rather than creating a few big winners, the draw is designed to allow as many people as possible a small win or to at least break even.

Read more: El Gordo Spanish lottery awards billions of euros

Members of the same family, or colleagues, usually pool together to buy El Gordo tickets.

If 10 people buy a share in the winning ticket – the top €4 million-lottery – each person receives €400,000, before taxes.

Winners of the top prize will pay 76,000 euros ($84,000) in taxes. 

El Gordo, which is run by the Spanish lottery, gives out millions of prizes every year.

The lottery tradition goes back to more than 200 years. The first Christmas draw was held on 18 December 1812.

El Gordo: Spain is in Lottery Fever

shs/mm  (AFP, dpa)

Every evening, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.