Once upon a time, if you fancied a flutter in the UK, there was only one name in the frame – the National Lottery. One ticket, one draw, and that was your lot. Now the market is packed with rivals offering dream homes, supercars, and headline jackpots. But as the prizes have got bigger, the price of playing has crept up too. Except in one place.
The Health Lottery: £1 Entry and Daily Draws
The Health Lottery has stuck to the original idea – £1 entry games – but added far more ways to play, including daily draws and near-instant games. You can check the latest draws and see how it works on the Health Lottery website.
The biggest change is The Big Win now running seven days a week. That means a £25,000 jackpot every single day, plus £100,000 Superdraws twice a week. Instead of waiting days for a result, players get daily chances to land a win, with extra second- and third-chance draws included at no extra cost.
QuickWin and All or Nothing Games
If you want something faster, QuickWin runs a new draw every three minutes. Each one carries a £25,000 jackpot and a reported 1 in 6 chance of winning any prize, turning it into one of the most active lottery formats available on the Health Lottery platform. There is also All or Nothing, which runs every Tuesday and Friday and flips the usual format. Match all your numbers and you win – match none and you also win. With payouts across 10 out of 13 outcomes, it offers some of the strongest odds of any UK lottery-style game.
Across all of these, the key detail stays the same: £1 to play. That consistency stands out in a market where entry prices are often higher, especially for the biggest headline draws.
Supporting Health and Wellbeing Projects
But the other part of the appeal is where the money goes. Like all regulated lotteries, a share of every ticket supports good causes, but The Health Lottery focuses specifically on health and wellbeing projects across Britain. Funding is distributed to local initiatives designed to improve quality of life and bring communities together. That means even when players do not win, part of their spend is supporting projects across the UK, from mental health support to grassroots community programmes.
To see the latest jackpots and how the games work, visit the Health Lottery site.



