If it seems like lottery jackpots topping $1 billion are more common nowadays, it's because they are.
The latest is a $1.25 billion Mega Millions prize up for grabs Friday night.
Since 2021, five prizes have topped $1 billion, not counting the latest game. The increased frequency is due to higher interest rates and worsened odds for winning a jackpot. The advertised lottery jackpot is for winners choosing payment through an annuity over 30 years. Higher interest rates mean a lump sum will grow larger when paid through an annuity over decades. And years ago, the odds were changed to make jackpots more rare, allowing prizes to roll over and become larger.
HOW DO INTEREST RATES INCREASE JACKPOTS?
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Nearly all jackpot winners opt for a lump sum payout, which for Friday night's drawing would be an estimated $625.3 million. The lump sum is the cash that a winner has actually won. The highlighted $1.25 billion prize is for a sole winner who is paid through an annuity, which is funded by that lump sum and will be doled out annually over 30 years.
That's where the higher interest rate becomes a factor, because the higher the interest rate, the larger the annuity can grow over three decades. The U.S. is in the midst of a remarkable run of interest rate increases, with the Federal Reserve raising a key rate 11 times in 17 months, and that higher rate enables a roughly $500 million lump sum prize to be advertised as a jackpot of about twice that size.
HOW DOES THE ANNUITY WORK?
A winner who chooses the annuity option would receive an initial payment and then 29 annual payments that rise by 5% each year. Opting for an annuity has some tax advantages, as less of the winnings would be taxed at the top federal income tax rate of 37%. It also could be an option for winners who don't trust themselves to manage so much money all at once.
If lottery winners die before 30 years, the future payments would go to their beneficiaries.
WHY DO WINNERS SNUB THE ANNUITY OPTION?
The annuities pay out big money, but the initial payment is not nearly as big as the amount for those taking the lump sum.
For example, a sole winner of Friday night's Mega Millions could choose a lump sum of an estimated $625.3 million or an initial annuity payment of about $18.8 million. Of course, those annuity payments would continue annually, and every year they would get a little larger until the final check would pay out about $75 million. By the end of the 30-year-period, the annuity payout would be roughly double the lump sum payout.
In both cases, the winnings would be subject to federal taxes, and many states also tax lottery winnings.
Nearly all jackpot winners take the lump sum option, indicating they believe they can invest their winnings and come out ahead of the annuity payment schedule. Or, maybe it's simply that they want the biggest initial payout possible.
WHAT ABOUT THE ODDS OF WINNING?
That's another factor that has created so many huge prizes for those who match all six numbers.
In 2015, the Powerball odds were changed from 1 in 175.2 million to 1 in 292.2 million. Mega Millions took a similar action in 2019 by lengthening the game's odds from 1 in 258.9 million to 1 in 302.6 million.
For lottery officials, the hope was that by making it harder to win jackpots, the prizes would roll over for weeks and create truly massive pots of money that would in turn generate higher sales.
The result is that all of the billion dollar jackpots have come after the changes in the odds.