EuroMillions Number Sequences and Consecutive Numbers

This page tracks how often EuroMillions draws include consecutive numbers and longer number sequences. It helps you read recurring runs in the main-number field more clearly.

Key takeaways for Number Sequences

Top Sequence

20-21 × 13

Longest Sequence

16-17-18 × 3

20-21 × 13 is one of the most repeated consecutive runs in the archive, while 16-17-18 × 3 marks the longest recurring chain shown here.

Consecutive numbers are not unusual in lottery history. This tab simply shows how often those runs have appeared in past draws.

Window Size

Controls the draw sample used by this analytics view. The canonical URL stays unchanged.

Dataset period Friday, 2 January 2026 — Tuesday, 23 June 2026
Sample size 50 draws
Metric window Selected analysis window: 50
Interpretation Detects consecutive number chains and occurrence intervals inside the selected sample.

🔢 Consecutive Sequences

Pairs, triplets, and longer consecutive number runs (e.g. 2-3-4) found in draw history. Click for details.

This view analyzes main numbers only. Secondary bonus or star pools are intentionally excluded because their sample space is too small for comparable tuple structure.

🔗 Pairs (21 unique)

17 18
3× · 6%
16 17
2× · 4%
22 23
2× · 4%
46 47
2× · 4%
1 2
1× · 2%
13 14
1× · 2%
15 16
1× · 2%
18 19
1× · 2%
23 24
1× · 2%
25 26
1× · 2%
26 27
1× · 2%
27 28
1× · 2%
3 4
1× · 2%
35 36
1× · 2%
4 5
1× · 2%
41 42
1× · 2%
42 43
1× · 2%
43 44
1× · 2%
45 46
1× · 2%
5 6
1× · 2%
6 7
1× · 2%

🔗🔗 Triplets (2 unique)

16 17 18
1× · 2%
26 27 28
1× · 2%

🔗🔗🔗 Quadruplets (0 unique)

No results found

🔗🔗🔗🔗 Quintuplets (0 unique)

No results found

What are number sequences in lottery draws?

They are consecutive numbers such as 12-13 or 21-22-23 that appear together in the same draw.

How often do consecutive numbers appear?

This page shows how often consecutive runs appeared in the historical EuroMillions archive and which runs repeated more than once.

Are number sequences unusual?

Not necessarily. Consecutive numbers appear naturally in real lottery history, even if they often look unusual to players.

These statistics describe historical draws. They do not increase the mathematical odds of the next independent draw.