What happened to the UK’s biggest lottery winners as ticket-holder scoops £181m EuroMillions jackpot
A UK player in Tuesday’s EuroMillions draw has just become the third-biggest jackpot winner ever, scooping a “life-changing” £181 million.
One lucky player matched all five category main numbers, plus the two lucky star numbers to win a total of £181,073,415.70, National Lottery operator Allwyn said.
The winning main EuroMillions numbers were 12, 14, 27, 44, and 50, and the winning EuroMillions Lucky Star numbers were 04 and 12.
It means the mystery winner is now instantly richer than the likes of Adele and Dua Lipa.
A single winner would be instantly richer than Dua Lipa.
(Dominique Charriau via Getty Images)
There have been several other big EuroMillions winners in the UK – but what happened to them?
Here, Yahoo News UK looks at the top 10 largest UK lottery winners – and what some of them did with their sudden fortunes…
Anonymous – £195,707,000
A UK ticket-holder scooped the record EuroMillions jackpot of £195m on 19 July 2022 – the biggest National Lottery win of all time.
Joe and Jess Thwaite – £184,262,899.10
Joe and Jess Thwaite, from Gloucester, scooped a then record-breaking £184,262,899 with a Lucky Dip ticket for the draw on 10 May 2022.
At the time, Mr Thwaite was a communications sales engineer, and Mrs Thwaite ran a hairdressing salon with her sister.
Mrs Thwaite said at the time that the couple were planning a holiday to Hawaii, that their two children had always talked about.
Joe and Jess Thwaite scooped over £180m in 2022.
(Andrew Lloyd)
She said: “The win gives us time to dream, which we haven’t had before. We’ve had one week to think about this and we now have time to share lots of experiences and go on adventures with our family and friends…
“Just to see their faces when we can make these things come true will be worth every penny.”
Mr Thwaite revealed he was working on the day of the draw and by 4pm he thought he “better buy a ticket” because he was aware of the jackpot.
He said: “Generally my luck is pretty terrible, to be honest with you.”
Joe and Jess Thwaite only bought their ticket hours before the draw took place.
(Andrew Matthews, PA Images)
Mr Thwaite said that when he received an email telling him he won a prize he thought it was a lucky dip.
“Then I looked at the amount and I put the phone down. And I picked the phone up again, and I looked at the amount again. I first thought it was in the thousands,” he said, adding that he thought it was “life-changing”.
But then he “started counting the digits”, adding: “Amazing, but also surreal.”
Asked if there is one thing they have always dreamed of buying, Mrs Thwaite said: “We’re not really those materialistic people. If you saw our house you would know. I’ll probably buy a new car I’m sure, or something like that, but we haven’t got a huge… we’d love to go on a holiday family.”
Anonymous ticket holder – £177m
In December 2024, a single ticket holder won £177m and joined the ranks of super-rich celebrities like Harry Styles and Anthony Joshua. Both are estimated to have a wealth of £175m – £2m less than this EuroMillions winner.
Anonymous – £170,221,000
The fourth biggest winner of the National Lottery to date scooped £170m in October 2019, after matching all the numbers in a Must Be Won draw.
Colin and Chris Weir – £161,653,000
Colin and Chris Weir, from Largs, North Ayrshire, bagged their historic winnings in July 2011, making them the biggest UK winners at the time.
Mr Weir said shortly after their win that the couple, who have two children, had always “lived within our means” – but the money “brings about a whole new life”.
He said: “We now have so many new opportunities to explore but we won’t rush it. For us, it will be a gradual change with choices to be made.”
Explaining the moment they found out they had won, Mrs Weir added: “We had bought five Lucky Dips, as the jackpot was now so big. I started circling the numbers I had matched but wasn’t doing very well. Then on the fifth line, all the circles seemed to join up. I had all of them but couldn’t believe what I was seeing.”
Colin Weir and his wife Chris were the biggest winners at the time they won over £160m in 2011.
(REUTERS / Reuters)
She added: “We were tickled pink. I even had a glass of white wine, which is something I normally only do at Christmas. It really is unbelievable.”
Mr Weir used £2.5m of his fortune to invest in his beloved Partick Thistle Football Club, which led to one of the stands at the stadium being named after him.
He later acquired a 55% shareholding in the club, which was to be passed into the hands of the local community upon his death. He died in December 2019, aged 71.
The couple also set up the Weir Charitable Trust in 2013 and donated £1m to the Scottish independence referendum in 2014. They divorced in the same year as Mr Weir’s death.
Adrian and Gillian Bayford – £148,656,000
Adrian and Gillian Bayford, of Haverhill, Suffolk, won €190m euros in a EuroMillions draw in August 2012, which came to just over £148m.
The couple, who have two children, told reporters at the time that they would share the money with people who had supported them.
Mr Bayford revealed that he had convinced his wife that they had both forgotten to buy a ticket when they watched the draw. But after checking the ticket he had bought, he went “a bit pale”, according to Mrs Baysford.
She said: “I checked the numbers on my phone, the TV, the internet – and we just looked at each other and giggled.”
Adrian and Gillian Bayford became EuroMillions jackpot winners in 2012.
(Sean Dempsey, PA Images)
The couple said they then spent the night on the internet deciding how to spend the money they had just won.
Mrs Baysford added: “I find it hard to take in the actual quantity of it. We have always worked and saved up for holidays or things that we need.
“We have lived within our means and been comfortable, but we have been like ships in the night to earn the income we needed. It will be fantastic to spend more time as a family now.”
The couple bought a Grade II listed estate in Cambridgeshire, complete with cinema and billiards room, but it was sold in 2021, some years after the pair divorced, as reported by The Mirror.
Anonymous – £123,458,008
The seventh biggest National Lottery winner won a Superdraw rollover jackpot in June 2019, and decided not to go public with their success.
Anonymous – £122,550,350
After nine rollovers, one lucky anonymous ticket-holder bagged more than £122m in April 2021.
Anonymous – £121,328,187
Another of the UK’s top 10 lottery winners found their fortune through a Superdraw jackpot rollover, this time in April 2018.
Frances and Patrick Connolly – £114,969,775
Frances Connolly, a former social worker and teacher, said they hugged and had a cup of tea after winning nearly £115m on New Year’s Day in 2019.
The couple, from Moira, County Down, said they had written a list of 50 family and friends to share their good fortune with – none of whom have been told of their good fortune.
The parents of three daughters, said they celebrated their win in a low-key way.
Frances and Patrick Connolly scooped a £115m EuroMillions jackpot in the New Year’s Day lottery draw in 2019.
(Liam McBurney, PA Images)
السيدة كونلي قالت في ذلك الوقت: “نحن لا نبالغ في الحماس – ربما رفعت صوتي قليلاً عندما اكتشفت ذلك – ولكن احتفلنا بكوب شاي وقبل.
“هذه مبلغ كبير من المال ونريد أن يكون له تأثير كبير على حياة الأشخاص الذين نعرفهم نحبهم، وكذلك على مستقبلنا. هذا الفوز يمنحنا الفرصة لإحداث فرق حقيقي لعائلتنا وأصدقائنا.”
قامت السيدة كونلي بإنشاء مؤسستين خيريتين بعد فوزها، وتقدر أنها قد قدمت بالفعل 60 مليون جنيه إسترليني للمؤسسات الخيرية، بالإضافة إلى الأصدقاء والعائلة.
وتعتبر مساعدة الآخرين إدمانًا، قائلة: “إنه يمنحك شعورًا بالرضا وهو إدمان. أنا مدمن الآن.”