By Chronos Team • Dec 15, 2025 • 3 min read
If you play the lottery, you have probably heard this advice: "Don't pick last week's numbers. They just won, so they won't win again."
It sounds logical. It feels intuitive. It is also mathematically wrong.
In fact, avoiding the previous winning numbers is one of the most common mistakes casual players make. This phenomenon is known as the Repeater Strategy, and the math behind it is surprisingly powerful.
The "Memory" Myth
Lottery balls are inanimate objects. They have no memory. The ball labeled "7" does not know it was picked last Friday. It does not "need a rest."
Every single draw is an independent event. The odds of Number 7 appearing today are exactly the same as they were last week (1 in 50).
The 33% Rule (The Math)
While each number has the same odds, the probability of sets behaves differently.
Combinatorial mathematics (specifically probability theory related to the "Birthday Problem") tells us something fascinating about 5/50 lotteries like Eurojackpot:
In approximately 33% of all draws, at least one winning number is a "Repeater" from the previous draw.
That means in 1 out of every 3 draws, a number from the last winning ticket appears again immediately.
Why Players Miss This
Most players suffer from the Gambler's Fallacy. They believe that if a number has appeared recently, it is less likely to appear again ("It's used up").
By systematically excluding the 5 main numbers from the previous draw, you are statistically eliminating the winning combination in 33% of cases. You are effectively playing a harder game than the machine is.
How to Use "Repeaters" in EuroLotto Predictor
We have baked this probability directly into our Hot Numbers engine.
- Go to Advanced Statistics (The Lab).
- Enable the "Hot Numbers (Recent)" strategy.
- Our algorithm automatically boosts the score of numbers drawn in the immediately preceding draw, ensuring you don't miss out on a Repeater event.
Don't bet against the math.
Check the Next Winning Numbers
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