Current:Home > MarketsPowerball jackpot winners can collect anonymously in certain states. Here's where -VitalWealth Strategies
Powerball jackpot winners can collect anonymously in certain states. Here's where
TradeEdge View
Date:2025-04-08 01:02:16
If someone wins the jackpot in Saturday's Powerball drawing, there is a possibility that person's identity will never be known.
Laws in 18 states allow lottery winners to collect prizes anonymously, meaning that we may never know who wins the estimated $750 million dollar jackpot.
In 2022, the winners of a Mega Millions jackpot in Illinois remained anonymous under state law, with the Illinois Lottery describing them as, “two individuals, who agreed to split the prize if won – and they stayed true to that word," in a press release.
Here are the places where winners can anonymously claim lottery prizes, and the requirements for them.
More:$70M Powerball winner, who was forced to reveal her identity, is now a fierce advocate for anonymity
Where winners can claim the Powerball jackpot anonymously
- Arizona: prize must be over $100,000
- Delaware: any prize
- Georgia: prize must be over $250,000
- Illinois: prize must be over $250,000
- Kansas: any prize
- Maryland: any prize
- Michigan: prize must be over $10,000
- Minnesota: prize must be over $10,000
- Mississippi: any prize
- Missouri: any prize
- Montana: any prize
- New Jersey: any prize
- North Dakota: any prize
- South Carolina: any prize
- Texas: prize must be over $1 million
- Virginia: prize must be greater than $10 million
- West Virginia: prize must be over $1 million
- Wyoming: any prize
Lotto regret:Dream homes, vacations and bills: Where have past lottery winners spent their money?
What is the largest Powerball jackpot ever?
If the right six numbers are pulled Saturday night, the jackpot would land as the eighth largest win of all time.
- $2.04 billion, Powerball, Nov. 7, 2022: Won in California
- $1.586 billion, Jan. 13, 2016: Three winners in California, Florida, Tennessee.
- $1.080 Billion, July 19, 2023: Won in California.
- $768.4 million, March 27, 2019: Won in Wisconsin.
- $758.7 million, Aug. 23, 2017: Won in Massachusetts.
- $754.6 Million, Feb. 6, 2023: Won in Washington.
- $731.1 million, Jan. 20, 2021: Won in Maryland.
- $699.8 Million, Oct. 4, 2021: Won in California.
- $687.8 Million, Oct. 27, 2018: Won in Iowa and New York.
- $632.6 Million, Jan. 5, 2022: Won in California and Wisconsin
What are the odds of winning the Powerball jackpot?
The odds of winning the Powerball jackpot are long. Players have a one in 292,201,338 shot at winning the grand prize, a one in 11,688,053.52 shot at winning the $1 million prize and a one in 24.87 chance of winning any prize.
Powerball numbers you need to know:These most commonly drawn numbers could help you win
How to play Powerball
Powerball tickets cost $2 per play.
Players must match five white balls numbered one through 69 and one of 26 red powerballs to win the jackpot.
veryGood! (99)
Related
- Clay Aiken's son Parker, 15, makes his TV debut, looks like his father's twin
- 2 officers wounded by gunfire at home that later erupts in flames in Philadelphia suburb
- ‘Moana 2’ is coming to theaters for a Thanksgiving release
- Virginia Democrats are sending gun-control bills to a skeptical Gov. Youngkin
- Boy who wandered away from his 5th birthday party found dead in canal, police say
- Connecticut's Geno Auriemma becomes third college basketball coach to reach 1,200 wins
- Top Rated & Best-Selling Mascara Primers That Deliver Thicker, Fuller Lashes
- How Grammys Execs Used a Golf Cart to Rescue Mariah Carey From Traffic
- British swimmer Adam Peaty: There are worms in the food at Paris Olympic Village
- What’s next for Jennifer and James Crumbley, the parents of the Michigan school shooter?
Ranking
- Kansas City Chiefs CEO's Daughter Ava Hunt Hospitalized After Falling Down a Mountain
- Sports leagues promise the White House they will provide more opportunities for people to exercise
- Black people more likely to sleep less after some police killings, study says. It's detrimental for their health
- Package containing two preserved fetuses sent to Mütter Museum in Philadelphia, police investigating
- A Georgia governor’s latest work after politics: a children’s book on his cats ‘Veto’ and ‘Bill’
- TikTok Shop is taking on Amazon — one viral video at a time
- 33 people arrested after Gaza-related protest in suburban Chicago
- Taylor Swift, fans overjoyed as Eras Tour resumes in Tokyo
Recommendation
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Package containing two preserved fetuses sent to Mütter Museum in Philadelphia, police investigating
Feds make dozens of bribery arrests related to New York City public housing contracts
Sebastián Piñera, former president of Chile, dies in helicopter accident
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
CDC is investigating gastrointestinal sickness on luxury cruise ship Queen Victoria
It's the Year of the Dragon. Here's your guide to the Lunar New Year
Satellite images show scale of Chile deadly wildfires, destroyed neighborhoods