Current:Home > MyMega Millions jackpot winners can collect anonymously in certain states. Here's where. -Wealth Legacy Solutions
Mega Millions jackpot winners can collect anonymously in certain states. Here's where.
EchoSense Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-03-11 07:14:27
If someone wins the jackpot in tonight’s Mega Millions, 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 over $1.35 billion dollar jackpot.
In 2022 the winners of an equally large 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.
Lotto regret:Pitfalls of Mega Millions, lottery winners serve as cautionary tales as jackpots swell
Where winners can claim Mega Millions 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
Dream homes, vacations and bills:Where have past lottery winners spent their money?
What is the largest Mega Millions jackpot ever?
At $1.35 billion, the jackpot for the upcoming Mega Millions drawing is currently the second-largest jackpot in the lottery's history. Here's where the other record-holders stand:
- $1.537 billion from one winning ticket in South Carolina in October 2018.
- $1.350 billion estimated for Friday night if someone wins
- $1.348 billion from one winning ticket in Maine in January 2023.
- $1.337 billion from one winning ticket in Illinois in July 2022.
- $1.25 billion in the current 2023 lottery.
- $1.05 billion from one winning ticket in Michigan in January 2021.
- $656 million from three winning tickets in Illinois, Kansas and Maryland in March 2012.
What are the odds of winning?You have a better chance of dying in shark attack
How to play Mega Millions
Tickets to Mega Millions cost $2 per play.
There are nine total ways to win a prize, from the jackpot to $2.
To play, pick five numbers from 1 to 70 and one Mega Ball number from 1 to 25. You can choose Easy Pick or Quick Pick to have the terminal randomly pick numbers for you. You win the jackpot by matching all six winning numbers in the drawing.
What is the Megaplier?
Most states offer the Megaplier feature, which increases non-jackpot prizes by two, three, four and five times.
It costs an additional $1 per play. Before each regular Mega Millions drawing, the Megaplier is drawn. From a pool of 15 balls, five are marked with "2X," three with "4X" and one with "5X."
veryGood! (3656)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- EPA Paused Waste Shipments From Ohio Train Derailment After Texas Uproar
- After a historic downturn due to the pandemic, childhood immunizations are improving
- Army Corps of Engineers Withdraws Approval of Plans to Dredge a Superfund Site on the Texas Gulf Coast for Oil Tanker Traffic
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- AMC Theaters reverses its decision to price tickets based on where customers sit
- Jennifer Aniston’s Go-To Vital Proteins Collagen Powder and Coffee Creamer Are 30% Off for Prime Day 2023
- Why Khloe Kardashian Feels Like She's the 3rd Parent to Rob Kardashian and Blac Chyna's Daughter Dream
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- Oil Companies Had a Problem With ExxonMobil’s Industry-Wide Carbon Capture Proposal: Exxon’s Bad Reputation
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Biden frames his clean energy plan as a jobs plan, obscuring his record on climate
- To Save Whales, Should We Stop Eating Lobster?
- Amazon Prime Day 2023 Flash Deal: 52% Off a Revlon Heated Brush That Dries and Styles at the Time Same
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- 2022 Will Be Remembered as the Year the U.S. Became the World’s Largest Exporter of Liquified Natural Gas
- A mom owed nearly $102,000 for her son's stay in a state mental health hospital
- As seas get hotter, South Florida gets slammed by an ocean heat wave
Recommendation
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
How Should We Think About the End of the World as We Know it?
Is COP27 the End of Hopes for Limiting Global Warming to 1.5 Degrees Celsius?
Study: Higher Concentrations Of Arsenic, Uranium In Drinking Water In Black, Latino, Indigenous Communities
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
Inflation may be cooling, but the housing market is still too hot for many buyers
20 Lazy Cleaning Products on Sale During Amazon Prime Day for People Who Want a Neat Home With No Effort
Delivery drivers are forced to confront the heatwave head on
Tags
Like
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- New EPA Proposal to Augment Methane Regulations Would Help Achieve an 87% Reduction From the Oil and Gas Industry by 2030
- Decarbonization Program Would Eliminate Most Emissions in Southwest Pennsylvania by 2050, a New Study Finds