Powerball Jackpot Hits $930 Million, But Winners Face Crushing Taxes
The Powerball jackpot has reached a staggering $930 million, making it the third-largest lottery prize of 2025 so far. However, for the eventual winner, the payout will be significantly smaller after taxes and deductions.
In Monday's drawing, no tickets matched all six numbers, leaving the massive prize intact. If a winner emerges in the next draw, they'll have two options: take $930 million split across 30 annualized payments or receive a lump-sum cash prize of $429 million.
While choosing the lump sum may seem like the more lucrative option, it comes with a hefty federal withholding of 24% first, which reduces the winnings to around $326 million. With an additional 37% federal marginal rate potentially applying depending on their taxable income, the winner's take-home pay could be as low as $270 million.
If the annual payment route is chosen, winners would receive $31 million annually, but after the federal marginal rate kicks in, it drops to $19.5 million. The good news is that not all states tax lottery winnings equally – some like Texas, Florida, and California don't charge a state tax – while others like New York impose a 10.9% tax.
The odds of winning this massive jackpot are astronomically low at 1 in 292.2 million, making it worse than even the notoriously tough Mega Millions draw with odds of 1 in 290.4 million.
The Powerball jackpot has reached a staggering $930 million, making it the third-largest lottery prize of 2025 so far. However, for the eventual winner, the payout will be significantly smaller after taxes and deductions.
In Monday's drawing, no tickets matched all six numbers, leaving the massive prize intact. If a winner emerges in the next draw, they'll have two options: take $930 million split across 30 annualized payments or receive a lump-sum cash prize of $429 million.
While choosing the lump sum may seem like the more lucrative option, it comes with a hefty federal withholding of 24% first, which reduces the winnings to around $326 million. With an additional 37% federal marginal rate potentially applying depending on their taxable income, the winner's take-home pay could be as low as $270 million.
If the annual payment route is chosen, winners would receive $31 million annually, but after the federal marginal rate kicks in, it drops to $19.5 million. The good news is that not all states tax lottery winnings equally – some like Texas, Florida, and California don't charge a state tax – while others like New York impose a 10.9% tax.
The odds of winning this massive jackpot are astronomically low at 1 in 292.2 million, making it worse than even the notoriously tough Mega Millions draw with odds of 1 in 290.4 million.