Full list of biggest Lottery winners after someone wins £209,000,000 EuroMillions jackpot

Joe Thwaite, 49, and Jess Thwaite, 46, from Gloucestershire celebrate after winning the record-breaking EuroMillions jackpot of ?184M from the draw on Tuesday 10 May, 2022, at the Ellenborough Park Hotel, in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire. Picture date: Thursday May 19, 2022. PA Photo. See PA story LOTTERY EuroMillions . Photo credit should read: Andrew Matthews/PA Wire
Jess and Joe Thwaite were the record holders for just two months and a few days after winning £184,000,000 in 2022 (Picture: Andrew Matthews/PA Wire)

Someone won £209,300,000 in the EuroMillions on Friday after the jackpot rolled over seven times in a row.

If it had been won in the UK – not Austria, where a lucky individual bought a ticket for £10 – it would have smashed a national record held since 2022.

That year, the record was set and broken – and nearly broken again – in the space of just four months.

Jess and Joe Thwaites only wore the crown for two months that year before some secret someone usurped them.

Fortunately for the winner of a £195.7 million jackpot that July, they get to keep the ‘biggest ever UK lottery win’ title, at least for now.

But as some lottery winners have found, the change brought by so much money isn’t always good.

So who are the 10 reigning EuroMillions champions who’ve won the biggest ever UK lottery jackpots?

10. Frances and Patrick Connolly – £114,969,775

Originally from Northern Ireland, Patrick and Frances Connolly were the fourth biggest winners when they it the jackpot on New Year’s Day, 2019.

They splashed their cash on a lot of things – Jaguar, Aston Martin and Alfa Romeo cars, and a County Durham Mansion with seven acres of land, and gifts worth £60million for their family and friends.

EMBARGOED TO 2000 TUESDAY APRIL 27 File photo dated 04/01/19 of Frances Connolly, 52, and Patrick Connolly, 54, from Moira in Northern Ireland, who scooped a ?115 million EuroMillions jackpot in the New Year's Day lottery draw. The lottery winner who has given away more than half of her ?115m fortune said she is addicted to giving to others. Frances revealed she has already busted the charity budget she agreed for this year with husband Paddy - and has given away what they would have donated up until 2032. Issue date: Tuesday April 26, 2022. PA Photo. See PA story LOTTERY Connolly. Photo credit should read: Liam McBurney/PA Wire
Frances and Patrick Connolly spent their winnings on friends, family, cars, property and charity (Picture: Liam McBurney/PA)

A grant-giving charity – PFC Trust – they founded funds community groups in Hartlepool, where they moved for work in 1990.

It’s become such a backbone of the charity sector, scammers masqueraded as the Connolly couple to offer cash to 50 people if they hit 10,000 subscribers on a bogus YouTube channel.

But the very first thing they bought with their winnings was a pair of M&S underwear

9. Anonymous – £121,328,187

The identity of the person who won this April 24, 2018 Superdraw jackpot has never been revealed after their chose to stay anonymous.

8. Anonymous – £122,555,350

This jackpot started as just £14million before rolling over all the way to the all-time spot of the UK’s ninth biggest lottery prize on April 2, 2021.

The winner, however, has kept their identity a secret.

7. Anonymous – £123,458,008

Another anonymous winner bagged this Superdraw jackpot on June 11, 2019, after it rolled over from a previous draw.

6. Adrian and Gillian Bayford – £148,656,000

Adrian Bayford, 41, and wife Gillian, 40, from Haverhill, Suffolk prepare to board a helicopter following a press conference at Down Hall Country House Hotel in Hatfield Heath, Hertfordshire, after they won ??148.6 million on Friday's EuroMillions jackpot.
Gillian and Adrian Bayford, from Haverhill in Suffolk, all smiles and waves before their lives turned turbulent (Picture: Sean Dempsey/PA)

The life of a lottery winner isn’t all glitz and glam. Sometimes it’s a catastrophe – and Adrian and Gillian Bayford can attest to that.

Since winning in August 2012, the married couple are no longer married.

Gillian now has a conviction for threatening her ex-boyfriend, domestic abuse charity worker Gavin Innes, who she pushed and shouted at in 2017.

She then married convicted fraudster Brian Deans, before ditching him because he begged for more and more money after blowing the monthly allowance she gave him on cars, watches and trips with friends.

Adrian, meanwhile, turned to eating 50 Cornish pasties a day to cope with loneliness after being dumped by younger women, one of whom he dated while sending saucy messages to an ex.

Picture supplied by Bav Media 07976 880732. Picture shows Horseheath Lodge,the home of lottery winner Adrian Bayford in Cambridgeshire which has been for sale for three years. Lottery winner Adrian Bayford?s 6.5 million Cambridgeshire estate is looking dilapidated THREE YEARS after he put it on the market. Aerial photos of his Grade II listed Georgian manor house show the extensive stable blocks are looking run-down, with weeds growing in the stable yard. The 49-year-old, who scooped a ?148 million EuroMillions win in 2012, is still struggling to sell Horseheath Lodge, which is set in rolling countryside near Linton on the border with Suffolk and Essex. He had an offer for the mansion last year but it hasn?t worked out and it is now back on the market. Bayford bought the mansion, which has seven bedrooms and three reception rooms, nine years ago. SEE COPY CATCHLINE Bayford Lotto winner dilapidated mansion still on market
This estate once played host to Elizabeth I centuries before Adrian Bayford was hauled up here guzzling Cornish pasties (Picture: Bav Media)

The 53-year-old since partnered up with fiancée, 46-year-old Tracey Biles, 46.

With her inspiration, Andrian has planted a vineyard the size of six football pitches at his estate on the border of Cambridgeshire and Suffolk.

He had also planned to turn 20 acres of his Horseheath Lodge estate in to a children’s theme park with a train ride and maze.

But he scrapped those designs after concerns the development would be far too ‘urban’, bring too much traffic, and threaten archaeological remains.

5. Colin and Chris Weir – £161,653,000

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Daniel Gilfeather/REX/Shutterstock (1383304v) Colin and Chris Weir at the MacDonald Inchyra Grange Hotel ?161m EuroMillions lottery winners press conference, Falkirk, Scotland, Britain - 15 Jul 2011 Euro Lottery winners Chris Weir, 55, and her husband Colin Weir, 64, at the press conference at the Macdonald Inchyra Grange Hotel near Falkirk to talk of their GBP 161, 653,000 record-breaking jackpot win.
Chris got a £3.5million house, while Colin bought a controlling stake in his favourite football club (Picture: Daniel Gilfeather/REX/Shutterstock)

Within a decade of winning the EuroMillions draw, Colin and Chris Weir, from Largs in North Ayrshire, had divorced after 38 years of marriage.

Colin died of sepsis and an acute kidney injury a few months later in December 2019, at the age of 71.

By then he had spent half his £80million share of the fortune on cars, property and a controlling stake in his favourite football club, Partick Thistle.

The former TV cameraman also donated millions to the Scottish National Party and the pro-independence Yes campaign ahead of the 2014 referendum.

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web
browser that
supports HTML5
video

Up Next

He left behind £212,000 worth of furniture, jewellery and artworks, a £10,000 Bentley Arnage, a Jaguar F-Pace SUV, a Mercedes Benz E Class Estate, a Mercedes Benz V Class people carrier, and a pot of petty cash containing £263.90.

After the split, Chris, previously a psychiatric nurse, kept their Frognal House mansion, which they bought for £3.5million after a 10-minute viewing.

She sold the property in Troon, Ayrshire, for £2.3million in 2019.

They had also set up the Weir Charitable Trust, which funded projects across Scotland.

4. Anonymous – £170,221,000

This EuroMillions jackpot had to go somewhere when it reached the stag of a Must Be Won draw.

It had already sat at the €190million cap for the maximum five draws by the time one UK ticketholder bagged it.

They chose to stay anonymous.

3. Anonymous – £171,815,297

An anonymous ticketholder claimed their EuroMillions jackpot within 48 hours of the numbers being drawn on September 23, 2022.

It was the third big win in the UK that year.

2. Joe and Jess Thwaite – £184,262,899

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web
browser that
supports HTML5
video

Up Next

A new wardrobe and drawers for their bedroom were the first buys for Gloucestershire couple Joe and Jess Thwaite.

They had bought a EuroMillions Lucky Dip ticket on The National Lottery app, ‘because it’s easier’, on the very day of the May 10, 2022, draw.

A communications sales engineer, and the business manager of a hairdressing salon, they were the first of three big winners that year.

Joe saw they’d won when he woke early the next morning. He said: ‘I saw how much and I didn’t know what to do.

Joe Thwaite, 49, and Jess Thwaite, 46, from Gloucestershire celebrate after winning the record-breaking EuroMillions jackpot of ?184M from the draw on Tuesday 10 May, 2022, at the Ellenborough Park Hotel, in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire. Picture date: Thursday May 19, 2022. PA Photo. See PA story LOTTERY EuroMillions . Photo credit should read: Andrew Matthews/PA Wire
Joe and Jess Thwaite were record-breaking winners until their record was broken just two months and a few days later (Picture: Andrew Matthews/PA Wire)

‘I couldn’t go back to sleep, I didn’t want to wake Jess up so I just laid there for what seemed like forever.

‘I spent some time searching for property with no budget limit, which was a novelty!’

When the alarm finally rang, Joe turned to Jess and said: ‘I’ve got a secret, I’ve got something to tell you.’

1. Anonymous – £195,707,000

Just two months after Joe and Jess Thwaite set the record for all-time biggest jackpot, their crown was taken by a winner who chose to keep their identity private.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *