Powerball Jackpot Has Jumped to $1.6 Billion: Here’s What You’d Actually Take Home

Staff Writer

The Powerball jackpot keeps climbing, now towering at an eye-popping $1.6 billion after no one hit all six numbers Saturday night. It’s the second-largest jackpot of the year, trailing only the $1.7 billion prize split by two winners in September.

Saturday’s winning numbers—4, 5, 28, 52, 69, and Powerball 20—went unmatched, which means the jackpot is once again ballooning before Monday’s drawing.

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For anyone daring enough to dream of hitting the jackpot, the reality of taxes hits hard. A winner would face a choice: take the full $1.6 billion in 30 annualized payments, or grab a lump sum of $735.3 million.

Most players lean toward the immediate cash, but that’s just the beginning of the cuts. A 24% federal withholding tax drops that $735.3 million down to $588.8 million right off the bat. Then, thanks to the federal marginal tax rate of 37%, the total could fall further to $463.2 million. Suddenly, that life-changing windfall doesn’t feel quite as huge.

Opting for the annuity isn’t a magic shield from taxes either. The 30 payments grow 5% each year, averaging $33.6 million annually, but federal taxes still chip away, leaving a net jackpot of roughly $1 billion over three decades.

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State taxes can tighten the grip even more. Some states, like New York, take up to 10.9%, while others—including Texas, Florida, and California—don’t touch lottery winnings at all.

For the hopeful, the next chance to hit the jackpot is Monday night at 10:59 p.m. EST. Results can be watched live on Powerball’s website or streamed via the lottery’s YouTube channel.

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