Intro — a high jackpot, but no great winner
The EuroMillions draw of 5 December 2025 involved a €130 million jackpot. No ticket picked up row 1: the combination is 9, 15, 25, 34, 46, with stars 8 and 12. This is the second consecutive draw without winning first place; The prize is therefore up and the next draw, on 9 December 2025, already has an estimated jackpot of 143 million euros. However, the year's record remains at EUR 250 million.
On the statistical screen, the draw presents a double paradox: on the one hand a huge unallocated pactole, on the other a very fragmented distribution of winnings, hundreds of thousands of tickets sharing several million. The analysis of frequencies over the last 50 prints allows us to go beyond the simple fact of various things and to identify some local trends — without deducing any certainty.
Number analysis — between local trends and chance
Of the last 50 draws, two numbers appear: the 9 and the 25, each appeared 7 times — a sign of local "heat" over the recent period. Numbers 15 and 34 appeared 4 times, while 46 only came out 3 times, classifying it as "cold" in this observation window. These frequencies reflect the coexistence of recurring elements (9, 25) and a less expected number (46) in the combination.
The even/unfair distribution is 2 pairs for 3 odds; On the value scale, there are 2 numbers greater than 25 and 3 numbers less than or equal to 25 — a slight predominance of small values and odd ones. Stars 8 and 12 are in the upper half of the range available (up to 12): nothing exceptional, but a parameter to be monitored for following the evolution of the pairs of stars.
Finally, it should be noted that none of the five "very hot" numbers in the last 50 rounds (13, 42, 45, 8, 24), each drawn between 9 and 10 times, appears in the evening suit. Useful reminder: the frequency of a number out of 50 draws does not guarantee its presence at a given draw — volatility remains the rule.
Detail of winnings — a big winner in row 2 and millions fragmented
In terms of earnings, the contrast is marked. Rank 1 (5+2) counts 0 winner: the €130 million jackpot remains unallocated. Rank 2 (5+1) was won by a single ticket, which will take 548 975.60 €. Rank 3 (5+0) counts 3 winners, each earning €18,329.20, less than the usual average for this category.
Lower in the winning hierarchy: 12 winners in row 4 received €1,665.10 each; 267 tickets left with €134.20 (range 5). Hundreds and then tens of thousands of players received smaller amounts: for example 11,887 tickets won €12.60 (3+1 stars) and 29,829 tickets won €9.50 (3 numbers). In total, the amounts paid in all categories are around €4,534,470.80, distributed between 735,131 winning tickets — an average of about €6.17 per winning ticket. Clear illustration: many small gains and some significant amounts.
Another observation is that small categories (ranges 11 to 13) absorb most of the amounts distributed. The last three categories together account for nearly 71% of the total paid out — about €3.23 million out of €4.53 million — which shows that the largest share of redistributed money benefits thousands of small winners rather than very large prizes.
Conclusion and look to next draw
On December 9, 2025, the EuroMillions will put at stake a jackpot estimated at 143 million euros. From a statistical point of view, there are several elements worth noting: the recent increase in numbers 9 and 25 (7 out of 50) to see if this trend is continuing, and the volatility illustrated by the absence of very hot numbers (13, 42, 45) tonight. In terms of earnings, the scheme repeats itself: a large rare lot and a significant fragmentation of the sums redistributed between many small winners.
In sum, this drawing offers a typical example of the mix between local regularities and general unpredictability: the figures allow us to identify trends, without ever questioning the hazard that remains determinant. Good luck to the players for the next draw.




