logo
EuroMillions results and numbers: National Lottery draw tonight, June 17

EuroMillions results and numbers: National Lottery draw tonight, June 17

Scottish Sun3 days ago

Make sure to check your numbers for tonight's draw
GOT YOUR TICKETS? EuroMillions results and numbers: National Lottery draw tonight, June 17
THE draw for tonight's National Lottery EuroMillions (June 17, 2025) has taken place, with life-changing cash prizes at stake.
Check the results to see if you have just won a fortune and bagged enough to start that jet-set lifestyle you always dreamed of.
Advertisement
2
Have you got the winning EuroMillions ticket?
Every EuroMillions ticket also bags you an automatic entry into the UK Millionaire Maker, which guarantees at least one player will pocket £1million in every draw.
You can find out if you're a winner by checking your ticket against tonight's numbers below.
Tonight's National Lottery EuroMillions winning numbers are: 13, 22, 23, 44, 49 and the Lucky Stars are: 03, 05.
The UK Millionaire Maker Selection winner is: XPCD66044.
Advertisement
Tonight's National Lottery Thunderball winning numbers are: 02, 06, 12, 17, 39 and the Thunderball is 07.
TOP 5 BIGGEST LOTTERY WINS IN THE WORLD £1.308 billion (Powerball) on January 13 2016 in the US, for which three winning tickets were sold, remains history's biggest lottery prize £1.267 billion (Mega Million) a winner from South Carolina took their time to come forward to claim their prize in March 2019 not long before the April deadline £633.76 million (Powerball draw) from a winner from Wisconsin £625.76 million (Powerball) Mavis L. Wanczyk of Chicopee, Massachusetts claimed the jackpot in August 2017 £575.53 million (Powerball) A lucky pair of winners scooped the jackpot in Iowa and New York in October 2018
The first EuroMillions draw took place on February 7, 2004, by three organisations: France's Française des Jeux, Loterías y Apuestas del Estado in Spain and the Camelot in the UK.
One of the UK's biggest prizes was up for grabs on December, 4, 2020 with a whopping £175million EuroMillions jackpot, which would make a winner richer than Adele.
Advertisement
Another previous UK winner who's whole life was altered with their jackpot was a player who wanted to remain anonymous on October 8, 2019. They walked off with a cool £170,221,000.
Colin and Chris Weir, from Largs in Scotland, netted a huge £161,653,000 in the July 12, 2011.
Adrian and Gillian Bayford, from Haverhill, Suffolk, picked up £148,656,000 after they played the draw on August, 10, 2012, while Jane Park became Britain's youngest lottery winner when she scooped up £1 million in 2013.
The odds of winning any EuroMillions prize are 1 in 13.
Advertisement
Could tonight's jackpot of £208million see you handing in your notice and swapping the daily commute for slurping champagne on a super yacht or lying back on a private beach in the Bahamas?

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'I worried for her physical safety but the online world put her in danger'
'I worried for her physical safety but the online world put her in danger'

Daily Mirror

time10 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

'I worried for her physical safety but the online world put her in danger'

Adele Zeynep Walton's sister, Aimee, was one of 88 alleged deaths caused by Canadian national poison parcels. In her new book Logging Off, Walton calls for greater online safety to protect others The online world is no longer a digital 'other' to our 'real life' world, when so much of our lives are spent engaging with technology, from ordering our groceries online to messaging friends. To think of scrolling away on your phone as an innocuous activity - as something to mindlessly be doing for nothing more than to pass the time - is to seriously misunderstand the harm technology is causing us. Adele Zeynep Walton 's Logging Off: The Human Cost of our Digital World takes a family tragedy - the death of her sister, Aimee - as a result of mental ill-health compounded by online harms and weaves together a compelling case for greater online safety controls. ‌ The book is a landmark moment, one which makes us decide whether we, as a society, are content with the destruction the digital world is causing. The link that online harms have on the 'real-world' is clear. It's a burgeoning issue, not just for those vulnerable, but to us all. ‌ 'It's a battle we all have stakes in,' Adele writes in Logging Off. But this is not a book that tells us to remain offline, it's a manifesto for safer controls on the internet. Adele and I met in June to discuss Logging Off, and the irony is not lost on me that it is through the digital world - a video-call - that we have this conversation. We begin with the person at the heart of this book, Adele's sister Aimee and her passing. Aimee was a creative soul who loved music and art. She adored Pharrell Williams, and even performed on stage with him. But during the pandemic, Aimee's mental health deteriorated. She was diagnosed with OCD, depression, and anxiety, which she struggled to come to terms with. In a spontaneous act, she applied to a university through clearing and got a place to study. 'She had requested a quiet accommodation [from the university] because as part of her OCD she was really sensitive to sound," Adele tells me. "She was in halls, which are bad for noise.' ‌ But Aimee dropped out of the course, as 'it was partying all night, real extreme noise and just it was really, really bad. She couldn't deal with it.' When she returned to the family home in Southampton, her condition deteriorated into a crisis, which resulted in her being hospitalised for her own safety. Adele tells me that Aimee dropping out of university 'sent her into a spiral of feeling really confused about what she was meant to do next in her life.' Adele adds, 'she just felt really lost.' ‌ 'We didn't think the online world would put her in danger' Her family were concerned about Aimee's wellbeing as 'she was leaving the house and not telling us who she was seeing or where she was going,' Adele says. 'We were just primarily so worried about her physical safety. And again, we didn't think that the online world would be the thing that put her most in danger.' As it would transpire after her death, Aimee, in the months before she passed away, had been visiting a pro-suicide forum, a site in which strangers talk to other people about taking their own lives. Through this site, she procured a poison which she used to take her own life. Aimee is believed to be one of 88 people in the UK to have received this chemical from Canadian-national Kenneth Law, who is the subject of an on-going investigation by the National Crime Agency for these deaths. ‌ The forum, which The Mirror have taken a decision not to name, was where Aimee made contact with a man who flew into the UK from the US. This person spent 11 days with her in a hotel in Slough, Berkshire, before she died in 2022. 'His presence made our pain tenfold' While the man was arrested on suspicion of assisting suicide, he was later released and no further action was taken. In Logging Off, Adele details that 'his presence made our pain tenfold. How could a total stranger be the last person to see her, speak to her, touch her?' This website is now the subject of an Ofcom investigation, under the new powers of the Online Safety Act. For Adele, Ofcom's investigation into the suicide forum was come 'far too late.' ‌ She says: 'A forum that encourages, instructs and provides the means to people to end their lives assisting suicide is illegal offline. If I had put a billboard up in the street saying: Contact me if you want this substance. That would immediately be removed and I would be arrested. But online, we're allowing it to happen every single day on an unregulated scale.' The Online Safety Act was passed into law in August 2024, but Adele says that she is yet to see a change in the digital world. The Act, she tells me, has resulted in 'no change in my personal ecosystem online in terms of less harmful content being available, less extreme content being available.' 'Ofcom's investigation is far too late' She adds: 'I would love to see this forum banned and not being able to be accessed to people in the UK because it poses a public health risk.' But at time of writing, this is not the case, the forum is still active, despite the on-going OFCOM investigation. ‌ A spokesperson for OFCOM said: 'We are currently gathering and analysing evidence to determine whether a contravention has occurred… Where we identify compliance failures, we can require platforms to take specific steps to come into compliance.' They add that in the 'most serious cases' they can 'require Internet Service Providers to block access to a site in the UK.' To say that a book is necessary or important is to feel as if the words are dripping in over-exaggeration, but this is not the case with Logging Off. There is no exaggeration here: this is one of the most important books I've read. The harms of the online world affects everyone - whether it's acknowledged or realised or not. This is not a problem that will cease to harm in its own time. Help us improve our content by completing the survey below. We'd love to hear from you!

Motorbike fan quits job after scooping £4m lotto win and reveals dream purchase
Motorbike fan quits job after scooping £4m lotto win and reveals dream purchase

Scottish Sun

time18 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Motorbike fan quits job after scooping £4m lotto win and reveals dream purchase

'It won't change us but it will change what we can do' A HARLEY-Davidson motorbike fan plans an easy ride into retirement after winning £4million on the National Lottery. Jon Waring, 57, has already handed in his notice as a police radio operator and nurse wife Lucy, 48, is also quitting. Advertisement 2 Jon Waring and wife Lucy scooped a £4million National Lottery jackpot Credit: PA The couple, who have a 15-year-old daughter, are set to splash the cash with a Harley trike topping Jon's shopping list, while a hot tub is Lucy's No1 priority. They also aim to buy a new family home in the area and create a music room in the house. Jon said: "This will be the perfect place to display the family's guitar collection - and potentially add to it too. "As a family, we love rock music and now the world really is our oyster - we hope to get the chance to attend gigs up and down the country. Advertisement "This win will just enable us all to slow down, enjoy life - and of course hit that road on the sunny days ahead on our new trike." They do not have passports but are now looking forward to whichever holidays take their fancy. Reacting to his huge win in the Lotto draw on May 31 Jon said: 'I keep thinking I am going to wake up from a dream. Jon, who also hopes to go on a Lions rugby trip, added: 'It won't change us but it will change what we can do.' Advertisement I almost died after freak surgery accident AND bus crash, now I've won £65k in lottery win 2 The couple plan to attend gigs up and down the country Credit: PA Unlock even more award-winning articles as The Sun launches brand new membership programme - Sun Club.

Euromillions £208m winner comes forward to claim jackpot
Euromillions £208m winner comes forward to claim jackpot

Daily Record

timea day ago

  • Daily Record

Euromillions £208m winner comes forward to claim jackpot

The winner of this week's huge EuroMillions jackpot has come forward to claim the prize. It is the 18th Irish winner and the largest ever Irish win of the Euromillions jackpot The winner of the colossal £208m (€250m) EuroMillions jackpot has stepped forward to claim their staggering prize. The winning ticket was bought in a shop in Co Cork, Ireland, and following an appeal for the ticketholder to come forward, one individual has now claimed the life-altering sum. This marks the 18th Irish win and the biggest ever Irish victory in the EuroMillions jackpot history. The previous Irish EuroMillions jackpot win occurred in February 2022, when a lucky player scooped up €30.9 million with a quick pick ticket from a service station in Ballina, Co Tipperary. ‌ Tuesday's draw saw the numbers 13, 22, 23, 44 and 49 emerge victorious, along with lucky stars 3 and 5. Cian Murphy, the chief executive of the Irish National Lottery, had earlier advised the winner to "stay calm" as the "massive" win might be overwhelming. ‌ The EuroMillions jackpot is capped at €250 million - equivalent to £208 million. This particular jackpot hit its cap on Friday June 6 after multiple rollovers. The EuroMillions prize fund is limited to €250m (or £208m), giving players five draws to win the life-changing amount, reports the Mirror. Despite the single fortunate winner, other players are being reminded to check their tickets for potential smaller wins. The new multimillionaire now finds themselves wealthier than footballer Harry Kane and pop sensation Dua Lipa, who have net worths of £115 million and £110 million respectively, and could rub shoulders with individuals featured in The Sunday Times Rich List 2025. "The EuroMillions jackpot of 250 million euro has been won in Ireland," announced the Irish operator on X on draw night. More than 92,000 players across Ireland scooped prizes in both EuroMillions and Plus games during this recent draw. The €250 million (£208 million) jackpot has made one Munster resident's dreams a reality. Speaking to RTE Radio, National Lottery spokesperson Emma Moaghan revealed: "Someone in Ireland is a quarter of a billion euro richer this morning." ‌ Whether the new multimillionaire will remain under wraps or step into the spotlight is yet to be determined. Moaghan confirmed that the "eye-watering" prize-winning ticket was procured from a shop rather than through an online purchase or a mobile application. She advised: "If at all possible stay calm, I know that might be easier said than done. Have a cup of tea and let it sink in." This monumental win equals the record set by an Austrian player back in March who bagged the first-ever €250 million EuroMillions jackpot. Since jackpots are currently capped at this figure, the record is expected to stand for the foreseeable future. ‌ Munster lottery participants are urged to double-check their tickets. Cian Murphy, CEO of the Irish National Lottery, expressed excitement about the historic win: "We are absolutely thrilled to see this incredible and record win for an Irish EuroMillions player." Lottery players are being urged to double-check their tickets and if they've hit the jackpot, to sign the back of their ticket, keep it secure, and get in touch with National Lottery HQ for further assistance. "We are advising our players to check their tickets and if they are the winner, sign the back of the ticket, keep it safe, and contact National Lottery HQ and we will guide you through the claims process," officials noted. The UK's Millionaire Maker Selection victor for Tuesday night's draw was confirmed as XPCD66044. Marking a record for a British ticket holder, one lucky individual scooped an astounding £195.7 million on July 19 2022, remaining anonymous. ‌ In light of the enormous €250 million jackpot prize, accredited financial planner Eoin McGee has cautioned the winning ticket holder to proceed with caution regarding their windfall. McGee offered his guidance to the Irish Mirror: "My advice is do absolutely nothing, except sign the back of the ticket. Ring the Lotto and confirm you have the winning ticket, but then sit back and tell nobody apart from your inner circle. "Don't make any big decisions now. This is life-changing. I tell Lotto winners to remember that the things which made you happy before this win are the same things that are going to make you happy afterwards. "Life will be different, but if you do not manage this properly, it can ruin you. This €250m can ruin you. Be careful about your decisions and any promises you're making. "Even be careful about telling your children how much they're going to get. Make no promises. It is a time of celebration and joy and being happy about it, but in the first six months, do not spend more than €10,000 on any one item."

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