Winning ticket in La Grossa New Year's Eve lotto bought in Sant Boi de Llobregat

Holders of ticket number 08702 will receive €200,000, with more prizes going to other lotto entries

Screenshot of the La Grossa New Year's Eve lotto draw with the winning number
Screenshot of the La Grossa New Year's Eve lotto draw with the winning number / Catalan News
Catalan News

Catalan News | @catalannews | Barcelona

December 31, 2023 01:56 PM

Catalonia's annual New Year's Eve lotto – La Grossa – is back again, with the biggest prize of €200,000 being handed out to holders of ticket number 08702. 

The winning ticket was sold in Sant Boi de Llobregat, just outside Barcelona.

Other numbers were drawn in the lottery, with prizes going to ticket holders across the land: in Manresa, Agramunt, Puig-reig, Parets, Salt, Calaf, Badalona and Molins de Rei. 

A second prize of €65,000 went to holders of ticket number 50913 in Barcelona, l'Hospitalet de Llobregat and les Roquetes, while a sum of €30,000 went to ticket number 01411 in Sant Vicenç dels Horts.

There were two 4th place prizes of €10,000 that went to ticket numbers 80243 and 08300, while three 5th place cash sums of €5,000 went to ticket numbers 04501, 39639, and 34975. 

For every number drawn out, there were even more chances to win some amount of money. 

Holders of tickets exactly one number above or below the big winner took home a smaller prize – €2,000 in the case of the first prize, and down to €150 for the 5th placed tickets. 

There were also awards for those who had any ticket with the final four, three, or two digits of each drawn number ranging from €10 to €1,000. 

Lottery created in 2014

The Catalan 'La Grossa' lotto, held on New Year's Eve, was created in 2014 by the Catalan government with the aim of using part of the funds to pay for social programs.

According to Catalan Lotteries, 'La Grossa' players have a 25% greater chance of winning a prize than those who play Spain's 'El Gordo', which has over 200 years of history. 

However, as the tension over Catalonia’s push for independence rose in recent years, peaking in 2017, settling on one of the two lotteries may no longer be a politically neutral decision.