The table below is courtesy of Camelot's phone line (0845 9100 000 *10).
The jackpot prize pool for this, the 15th triple rollover draw and the 425th rollover in total, included £5,146,335 (47.5%) rolled over from the previous lottery, in addition to the original jackpot prize pool of £5,681,652 (52.5%).
A further £3,000,000 of the rolled over money was allocated to the extra 150 £20,000 raffle prizes in this draw.
Category PrizeWinnersTotal Percentages
Jackpot £10,827,987 0 £0 0.0% - rolled over
5+bonus £93,421 4 £373,684 3.6%
5 match £1,129 281 £317,249 3.0%
4 match £96 17,348 £1,665,408 16.0%
3 match £25 322,214 £8,055,350 77.4%
Sub-totals 339,847 £10,411,691 72.2% of prizes
Raffle £20,000 200 £4,000,000 27.7% of prizes
Totals 340,047 £14,411,691 100.0% of prizesCategoryChangeFigurePercentagesTicket sales (Sat) 12.9% rise £35,568,710 65.1% of Sat+Wed sales
Ticket sales (Wed) 25.0% rise £19,036,010 34.9% of Sat+Wed sales
Ticket sales (S+W) 16.8% rise £54,604,720
The draw used ball set 1 in the Lancelot machine and the average main Lotto prize was £30.64.
One in every 52.3 main Lotto tickets won a prize (=1.91% of players).
If all 13,983,816 ticket combinations were additionally purchased for the main Lotto game, they would have made a loss of £12,307,819.
The prior history of the main Lotto jackpot ticket included 37 wins totalling £520.
From Saturday 12th July 2003 onwards, Camelot has completely refused to issue per-draw sales figures for any of their individual games,
despite continuously doing so for more than 8 years prior to that date. They blamed the media for only
concentrating on the main Lotto game sales (which have been falling steadily for years), which seems to be a poor excuse to me.
However, games with variable prize tiers such as the main Lotto can have their sales figures reverse-calculated to within a few pounds, which is what I have done.