logo
UK's biggest £208million EuroMillions jackpot will be won this week

UK's biggest £208million EuroMillions jackpot will be won this week

Daily Mirror4 days ago

The EuroMillions prize rolled over again after no one won the National Lottery last time, and it means the winner this week will worth more than Dua Lipa and Harry Kane
The UK's biggest ever lottery jackpot - a huge £208million - is up for grabs this week.
If the entire EuroMillions sum is awarded to one ticket holder, the winner will suddenly be worth more than Dua Lipa and Harry Kane - worth £115 million and £110 million respectively - and be on par with names from The Sunday Times Rich List 2025. The record-setting lottery draw will take place tonight.

The jackpot rolled over again last week, and so Brits have the chance to win the astonishing sum. Should one ticket holder win it, it will beat the previous record of £195,707,000, set on July 19, 2022.

And it will swiftly catapult the winner into the wealth of England captain Harry Kane, on big bucks with FC Bayern Munich in Germany, and three-time Grammy champ Dua Lipa.
The EuroMillions prize pot is capped at €250m, with players having five prize draws to win the life-changing amount. If nobody wins this week, the fifth and final "Must Be Won" draw will take place on Friday June 20.
In the meantime, players are reminded to check their tickets in case they are eligible to win a smaller chunk of the prize money. During the final draw, if no one matches all five numbers and two lucky stars, the threshold to win will drop to five numbers and one star.
The prize money could then be split between multiple winners, making several millionaires. Already this month, seven UK players have won a portion of the prize money after matching five numbers and one lucky star.
Five players won £3.6 million each on June 13, while another won £4.5 million on June 10, and another £2 million on June 6. Even winning smaller portions of the prize pot can be life-changing.
Winners of over £10 million give away, on average, a quarter of their win (24.5%). A further 91% report that they give time and or money to support a charity, while 10% say they have made someone else a millionaire.
When mum Annie Leith entered a different lottery last year, she was overwhelmed to be able to take her family on an abroad holiday for the first time. The yoga teacher, from Pill, Somerset, told the Mirror: "We have some wonderful memories, like waking up and hearing the waves crash off the cliffs in Tenerife. It was crazy to see and hear that. My children chasing lizards there was amazing, and the black sand on the beaches there was great. Digging shoes into the black sand was lovely. I remember the kids talking, or trying to talk, in Spanish out there and trying to encourage them.
"We have all got this little spark that something will happen outside the norm one day, and for us that has. This happened to my family to the nth degree so we are lucky... The world isn't this thing with boundaries, which again is maybe a Covid thing, and it is great to explore. We have been able to experience this now and it has been life-changing."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Meghan 'terrified' as Harry's decision over UK return 'sealed'
Meghan 'terrified' as Harry's decision over UK return 'sealed'

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

Meghan 'terrified' as Harry's decision over UK return 'sealed'

Threats from 'lunatics' and 'terrorists' will stop Harry and Meghan coming back to the UK, an expert says, but the Duke would have missed his dad on Father's Day The growing distance between Prince Harry and the royal family was highlighted once again at the King's recent birthday celebrations, where the Duke of Sussex was notably absent. At Trooping the Colour – which marks the monarch's official birthday – King Charles celebrated alongside his close family, including wife Queen Camilla, the Prince and Princess of Wales and their children, George, Charlotte and Louis. Sadly, Harry and his family were nowhere to be seen. Following his High Court defeat in May, the Duke of Sussex, 40, revealed that he was hopeful of a reconciliation with his father, but said that wouldn't be possible until he could keep his wife and children 'safe' while in the UK. ‌ ‌ Now, a royal expert says the chances of Archie, six, and Lilibet, four, becoming regular visitors to the UK and growing close to their cousins is looking increasingly unlikely because of Harry and his wife Meghan Markle 's very valid fears. 'Meghan understandably feels scared about coming to the UK with the children,' says former royal editor Duncan Larcombe. 'The threats are real and genuine. The threat is from lunatics, radical protesters that might want to make a name for themselves by jumping in front of them. Then of course you have the worst type, the terrorist threat. And there's no doubt Harry – and his family, as a result – is a huge target.' While Meghan, 43, appears to be feeling more comfortable sharing her children with the world – with her viral Baby Momma dance video and a Disneyland holiday album posted to her socials – the idea of her returning to the UK with them is another matter. A source has told the Mirror that while the mum-of-two is feeling more empowered today, it doesn't alter her safety worries. 'In some ways she's feeling stronger and she wants to share that,' our insider said. 'But she's still terrified of putting her kids at risk by coming back to the UK – any parent would panic if they were in Meghan's shoes. ‌ 'So even though Harry is really feeling the absence of his dad, especially after Trooping the Colour and Father's Day, the security stuff will probably always be an issue. 'He knows that things could've been so different if things had gone another way, but it's been five years since they left the UK and the chances of them coming back, even for a visit, seem slim to none. It's heartbreaking.' ‌ During his controversial interview with the BBC in May, Harry revealed he 'would love reconciliation' with his family. And our expert believes it's highly likely the Prince now wishes recent events had taken a different course. 'Harry is a sensitive soul and always wore his heart on his sleeve, so whether he'd admit it publicly or not, I'm sure he's full of regrets and wishes he'd done things differently,' says Duncan. With Trooping the Colour and Father's Day falling on the same weekend, it was bound to make him look back at the happy relationships he once had with his brother and dad, and I'm sure he'd love to be able to rebuild those.' ‌ Last month, Harry lost his bid to overturn the decision to deny him and his family state-funded, high level security provided for senior royals while in the UK. As a result, he said he 'couldn't see a world' in which he would be able to bring Meghan and the children back to his homeland. ‌ Duncan says the death of Harry's mother, Princess Diana, likely weighs heavily on the couple when it comes to their protection, as the absence of official Metropolitan Police protection was a 'contributing factor' in the accident that took her life. But he stresses that whether the couple are 'liked' or not is irrelevant to their safety. The key distinction, he says, is the difference between official royal security and private protection, which could mean the difference between life and death. ‌ Official royal security gives royals round-the-clock, armed protection from top Met Police officers and allows MI5 to 'surround them in a ring' of top-level intelligence. Given Meghan's understandable need to protect her children, Duncan suspects it would be very difficult for the family to feel safe without those measures in place. 'At big royal events, the security you actually see is the tip of the iceberg. There are a lot of undercover officers and agents working, too,' he says. 'Without the official support and security, Harry and Meghan are left with two or three bodyguards who are pretty blind to what the potential threats are.'

How Dua Lipa's lookalike sister Rina is desperate to be famous actress & how rivalry with star spurs her on
How Dua Lipa's lookalike sister Rina is desperate to be famous actress & how rivalry with star spurs her on

The Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Sun

How Dua Lipa's lookalike sister Rina is desperate to be famous actress & how rivalry with star spurs her on

IT can't be easy growing up in the shadow of one of the hottest and most famous singers in the world. So it's little wonder that there's a touch of sibling rivalry between Dua Lipa and her younger sister, aspiring actress Rina. 13 13 13 A source close to the family says: 'Not many people know what it's like to have a pop superstar as an older sister. 'It has without a doubt got its perks but constantly being in her shadow would take its toll on anyone. But it's made her more determined than ever to be her own person.' Rina was just 16 when her sister hit the big time, and since then Dua has continued her meteoric rise, landing Vogue covers and Grammy awards aplenty, not to mention an equally gorgeous fiance in Brit actor Callum Turner. Behind the scenes though, Rina has been working just as hard - and is determined to make a name for herself, independent of Dua. As well as gracing the pages of Vogue, she's already got her own fan pages, a whopping 1 million Insta followers, and just last week was spotted rubbing shoulders with Sydney Sweeney at Miu Miu's London party. Growing up in London, then their parents' native Kosovo, which they moved to when she was six, Rina has said she "worshipped" Dua. The move meant the sisters and their brother Gjin formed an incredibly tight bond as they navigated life in another country. When Dua was 15, however, she begged her family to let her move back to the UK to embark on a singing career. It wasn't a decision they took lightly and while Dua was chasing her dreams, Rina's formative teenage years were spent mostly without her big sister around. 'She was young, but she was mature, she was ready. My parents didn't let her go easily — it was all done in a very controlled way," Rina has said of that time. 'She had to get back at certain times and she lived with a family friend. But it was hard. I missed her. She worked very, very hard. I really looked up to her for that and I do to this day.' Inside glam life of Dua Lipa's sister Rina as 'Gen Z It Girl' models with Game of Thrones star and parties with Hadids By the time the family had reunited in the UK, Dua was well on her way to fame - and Rina had her own plan. With jet black hair, an enviable figure, and distinctive, different-coloured eyes (one brown, and one blue), she signed a modelling contract while still in school and, like many Gen Zs, fell into influencing. 13 13 An insider said: 'Rina has of course always really admired her sister but has had times felt that pressure of having such a successful sibling. 'She has also made it clear she wants to do things off her own back - she is grateful for the opportunities that have come her way because of Dua but she believes she would have made it on her own.' Now, Rina - who attended the prestigious Sylvia Young Theatre School, which has made the likes of Billie Piper and Nicholas Hoult, on Saturdays - has her heart set on becoming a successful actress. When she was 18, she vowed: 'I think Rina will be everywhere. My plan is to go forward with my acting and do that and really focus on that. 'I feel like a big budget film is the dream and going to your premiere in Leicester Square, but also I think a series would be really fun.' 13 13 Fast forward to this year, and Rina has appeared in short films The End of Love and Midpoint, and is set to make her feature film debut in Expectations - a contemporary adaptation of Charles Dickens' Great Expectations. 'Performing, being on stage, being in front of the camera — I knew that was what I wanted to do. I like to talk a lot," she has said. It's yet to be the glitzy career she had hoped for onscreen, but her popularity online is ever growing, though still falls well short of Dua's 87 million followers. Aspiring to the dizzy heights of fame enjoyed by Dua, Rina gushed: 'Dua's my biggest teacher and I'm so in awe of her work ethic.' Whether she manages to reach similar heights, though, is yet to be seen. 13

Welcome to the biosphere: Photographers capture Northern Ireland's delicate ecosystem
Welcome to the biosphere: Photographers capture Northern Ireland's delicate ecosystem

Belfast Telegraph

time3 hours ago

  • Belfast Telegraph

Welcome to the biosphere: Photographers capture Northern Ireland's delicate ecosystem

Five diverse projects go on display across NI as part of Belfast Photo Festival's 2025 edition As part of the 2025 Belfast Photo Festival, a quintet of photographers have collaborated with conservation groups and local communities across Northern Ireland to visualise the fragility and beauty of our natural heritage, with focus on Lough Neagh, peatland, marine areas, the wider Belfast Hills, and temperate rainforests. Visualising Northern Ireland's Natural Heritage is made possible with The National Lottery Heritage Fund. Thanks to National Lottery players, these new co-curated narratives and photographic works are being showcased and discussed across ten exhibitions and more than twelve events in Belfast and throughout Northern Ireland as part of this year's festival.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store