The latest Premium Bonds draw has taken place, with winners from Kirklees and Sheffield bagging the two £1 million jackpot prizes – check if you could be one of the lucky ones
Premium Bonds holders are being urged to check their accounts, as more than 24 million people could be in for the surprise of their lives.
The latest monthly draw by National Savings and Investments (NS&I) has crowned two high value jackpot winners. The winners, from Kirklees and Sheffield, have taken home £1 million each after their winning bonds – 150EN423722 and 513EP525664, purchased in January 2009 and September 2022 – were picked in the February 2025 draw.
In an intriguing twist, four lucky savers bought their winning bonds in October 2024, with bond 599XX274163 snapped up in Ealing and Winning Bond 597SP775933 secured in Bristol. Meanwhile, bonds 597AR806603 and 596QF32316 found homes in Hampshire and Isle Of Wight and in Gwent Valleys.
NS&I proudly boasts on its website: “Most banks only guarantee your savings up to £85,000. We’re the only provider that secures 100% of your savings, however much you invest. We’re backed by HM Treasury and we’ve been helping people save for over 160 years. Today, over 24 million customers save with us.”
The site also states: “We created Premium Bonds and you can only get them from us. Open an account and you could win big in our monthly prize draw.” Part of the allure of Premium Bonds is discovering which areas have been touched by fortune each month.
However, to ensure winners’ privacy and safeguard their personal details, NS&I adheres to strict rules when it comes to disclosing prize-winning locations, reports Birmingham Live. “Each customer is assigned to a town, local authority, county or Government Standard Region and country.
“When a winner is assigned to a town with less than 100,000 holders assigned to it, then we use the following hierarchy until we find a level where that area has at least 100,000 Premium Bonds holders,” the rules explain. “For large towns and cities that are divided into local authorities or boroughs, we quote the area with the fewest customers over the 100,000 reporting limit. This may mean the list quotes a local authority area or borough instead of the town or city.
“For Premium Bonds holders living outside the UK, we only publish the country when there are at least 100,000 holders living there. Otherwise, we publish the area as ‘overseas’.”