The Thai lottery, like many other forms of gambling around the world, has a simple premise: Participants buy tickets, pin their hopes on a sequence of numbers, and if those numbers match the winning sequence, they win. The lottery is more than a game; it’s a revenue generator for organizers, an entertainment source for the community, and a potential economic stimulant. Winners, flush with their windfalls, inject the money back into the local economy, and the anticipation of a win can shift consumer behavior.
The lottery is a national pastime that’s played by more than 19 million people in Thailand, or about 28.6% of the country’s native population. The government-sanctioned lottery is drawn on the first and 16th of each month and is one of two legal forms of gambling in the Land of Smiles. The lottery is so popular, in fact, that it’s not uncommon to see a street vendor carting a brown wooden box full of lottery tickets strapped to his or her bicycle.
A variety of strategies are employed to choose a winning combination, from praying to banana trees to interpreting dreams and seeing animals in the buildup to the lottery draw. Other methods include calculating short odds, finding out which numbers are unlucky for others, and purchasing caged birds and setting them free to increase your chances of winning.
The Thai government lottery (TGL) and Thai charity lottery (TCL) tickets are pre-printed, include anti-counterfeiting features, and must be purchased in ticket pairs. The draws for the first prize and the bonus prizes are conducted by a “Draw Chairman” who randomly selects colored balls to initialize each machine. The resulting combinations of six-digit numbers form the prize list.