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    Charity lotteries UK - do they actually offer better odds than the National Lottery?

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    • S
      sarah_g
      last edited by

      Been thinking about switching from the National Lottery to some charity lotteries after hearing they might have better odds. The National Lottery is what, 1 in 45 million for the jackpot? That's basically impossible.

      Anyone know which are the best charity lotteries uk has to offer? I've seen ads for People's Postcode Lottery and RNLI lottery but not sure if they're actually worth it. Do they genuinely offer better odds or is it just marketing fluff?

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      • M
        mike_bet
        last edited by

        People's Postcode Lottery definitely has better odds - it's 1 in 2.6 million for their weekly draw. Still not great but massively better than National Lottery. Plus smaller daily prizes with much better odds.

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          ukgambler99 @mike_bet
          last edited by

          The thing with charity lotteries is the prizes are generally smaller though. You're not looking at £20m+ jackpots like EuroMillions. It's a trade-off between better odds and smaller wins.

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          • B
            betting_pro @ukgambler99
            last edited by

            Let me break down the actual mathematics here:

            Expected Value = (Prize Amount × Probability of Winning) - Ticket Cost

            For National Lottery: EV = (£2,000,000 × 1/45,057,474) - £2 = £0.044 - £2 = -£1.956
            For People's Postcode: EV = (£400,000 × 1/2,600,000) - £12 = £0.154 - £12 = -£11.846

            So mathematically, you lose less per ticket with National Lottery despite worse odds. The monthly cost makes charity lotteries worse value.

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              sarah_g @betting_pro
              last edited by

              @betting_pro That's depressing but helpful! So basically all lotteries are terrible value regardless. At least with charity ones some money goes to good causes I suppose.

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              • C
                casino_dan
                last edited by

                Different types of lottery uk offers include weekly draws, daily draws, instant wins, and postcode-based games. Each has different odds structures. Health Lottery has 1 in 2.4 million odds for their main draw.

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                • L
                  lucy_wins
                  last edited by

                  I've been playing RNLI lottery for 2 years, won £25 three times. Not exactly life-changing but better than nothing from National Lottery in 10 years!

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                    tom_slots @lucy_wins
                    last edited by

                    @lucy_wins That's the psychological trap though isn't it? Small wins make you think you're doing better when really you're probably down overall. Classic gambler's fallacy.

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                    • J
                      james_uk @tom_slots
                      last edited by

                      The irony is that people obsess over lottery odds when they're all astronomically bad. You're more likely to be struck by lightning twice than win any major lottery jackpot. Might as well just donate directly to charity.

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                      • B
                        bonushunter1
                        last edited by

                        Here's a comparison of the main ones:

                        Lottery Odds Ticket Cost Max Prize Monthly Cost
                        National Lottery 1:45M £2 £20M+ Variable
                        People's Postcode 1:2.6M N/A £400K £12
                        Health Lottery 1:2.4M £1 £100K Variable
                        RNLI Lottery 1:240K N/A £10K £5

                        RNLI has best odds but tiny prizes.

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                        • S
                          slotqueen_uk @bonushunter1
                          last edited by

                          @bonushunter1 Brilliant table! Really puts it in perspective. RNLI looks tempting with those 1 in 240K odds. £10K would still be life-changing for most people.

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                            withdrawal_king @slotqueen_uk
                            last edited by

                            The lottery best odds uk actually comes from some smaller charity draws. Dogs Trust lottery sometimes has draws with 1 in 50,000 odds for smaller prizes around £1,000-£2,000.

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                              vip_player_uk
                              last edited by

                              Problem with charity lotteries is they're often subscription-based. Easy to forget you're paying monthly and suddenly you've spent £144/year on People's Postcode without realising.

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                                newbie_casino @vip_player_uk
                                last edited by

                                @vip_player_uk Exactly this! My mum signed up for three different charity lotteries and was paying £22/month total. Took her months to notice on her bank statement.

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                                  mobile_gambler @james_uk
                                  last edited by

                                  The existential question: is it better to have hope with terrible odds, or slightly less terrible odds with the same inevitable disappointment? Philosophy majors discuss...

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                                    jackpot_jane @mobile_gambler
                                    last edited by

                                    Been playing National Lottery since 1994, won maybe £200 total. Started Health Lottery last year, won £10 once. The house always wins in the end, whether it's Casumo slots or lottery tickets.

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                                      poker_pete_uk @jackpot_jane
                                      last edited by

                                      At least with poker at PokerStars Casino you can improve your odds through skill. Lottery is pure luck - might as well play Gonzo's Quest, at least that's entertaining.

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                                        roulette_rob @poker_pete_uk
                                        last edited by

                                        @poker_pete_uk Comparing lottery to casino games is interesting. European roulette has better odds than any lottery - 1 in 37 for single numbers paying 35:1. Still house edge but more transparent.

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                                          casinofan_gb @roulette_rob
                                          last edited by

                                          The mathematical reality of lottery probability follows this formula:

                                          P(win) = 1 / C(n,k) where C(n,k) = n! / (k!(n-k)!)

                                          For UK Lotto: C(59,6) = 59! / (6! × 53!) = 45,057,474
                                          So P(jackpot) = 1/45,057,474 ≈ 0.0000022%

                                          Even charity lotteries with 1:240,000 odds only give you 0.00042% chance. Your money's better invested in an ISA earning 4% annually.

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                                          • S
                                            slots_steve @casinofan_gb
                                            last edited by

                                            @casinofan_gb The ISA advice is sound but misses the entertainment value. People don't play lottery for investment returns - it's paying for the dream. Same reason people play Sweet Bonanza at Virgin Games.

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