Understanding Number-Frequency Charts (and Their Limits)
Our chart pages show how often each two-digit ending has appeared in a given draw's first prize across past results, plus "hot" (most-drawn) and "cold" (least-drawn) endings. These are popular, and they are genuinely interesting as history — but it is worth being clear about what they can and cannot tell you.
What the chart shows
- Frequency: the count of times each ending appeared over the draws on record.
- Hot endings: the endings that came up most often in that window.
- Cold endings: the endings that came up least often in that window.
All of this is a factual summary of results that have already been published. It is a record, nothing more.
Why it does not predict the next draw
Each draw is independent. A number that has not appeared for a long time is not "due", and a number that has appeared often is not "hot" in any predictive sense. Every possible outcome is equally likely in the next draw, regardless of what the chart shows. Past draws do not predict future draws.
This is why we publish frequency data as plain history and never as a tip. We do not sell predictions, paid number tips, or VIP number groups — anyone who does is selling you a coin-flip dressed up as insight.
Reading a chart responsibly
- Treat it as trivia about the past, not a strategy for the future.
- Ignore any site that turns the same data into a paid "guess".
- Remember that lottery participation involves financial risk and is for adults (18+) where legal.
Frequently asked
Can a frequency chart tell me which number will win next?
No. Each draw is independent and every outcome is equally likely, so a frequency chart is a record of past results only — it has no predictive power.
What is a 'hot' or 'cold' number?
A 'hot' ending simply appeared more often in the draws on record and a 'cold' one appeared less often. Neither is more or less likely to appear in the next draw.