Current:Home > ScamsMega Millions is up to $1.58B. Here's why billion-dollar jackpots are now more common. -Ascend Wealth Education
Mega Millions is up to $1.58B. Here's why billion-dollar jackpots are now more common.
View
Date:2025-04-18 01:51:00
The fortune of a lifetime is waiting to be claimed by a lucky winner in the Mega Millions lottery, which has ballooned to a record $1.58 billion. If it seems like such massive jackpots are occurring more frequently these days, it's not your imagination.
Including Tuesday's upcoming drawing, there have been about half a dozen jackpots that have exceeded $1 billion during the past five years, according to College of the Holy Cross economics professor Victor Matheson.
And the huge winnings aren't happening by chance, Matheson told CBS News earlier this year. The Multi-State Lottery Association (MUSL), a not-for-profit that coordinates the Mega Millions, has engineered the game to generate even larger sums, he noted.
"Number one, it's now a nation-wide lottery ... which means there are a lot of people contributing to the jackbot," Matheson said.
Mega Millions' next drawing
The next drawing — slated for 11 p.m. Eastern time on Tuesday — is one of a growing number of massive lottery jackpots in recent years.
A Powerball player in California won a $2 billion jackpot in November, while two anonymous Mega Millions players in suburban Chicago won a $1.3 billion prize last fall.
The largest Mega Millions payout ever won so far happened in October 2018 to a South Carolina resident who won $1.5 billion, lottery officials said.
Mega millions numbers
Hitting the jackpot would give someone a series of annuity payments for across 30 years, or the winner could opt for a one-time cash option of $757.2 million.
A single winner in Tuesday's drawing would take home the largest prize in Mega Millions history.
The jackpot rose to its current figure because no one picked the winning numbers — 11, 30, 45, 52 and 56, and Mega Ball 20 — on Friday, August 4.
Why are the jackpots getting bigger?
In the past decade, as noted by Matheson, MUSL transformed Mega Millions into a national game, with more people now contributing to the jackpot. On top of that, MUSL doubled the ticket price.
"They've made these tickets not just a dollar, but $2, which means the jackpot grows twice as fast as it did a decade ago," he said.
As the Washington Post reported in 2018, the new rules also gave Mega Millions participants more numbers to choose from, making it tougher to guess the combination needed to win the jackpot. Mega Millions is played in 45 states along with Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
With the lower odds of picking winning numbers plus higher ticket prices, the jackpot is more likely to grow faster from week to week, Matheson said.
- How Mega Millions has been engineered for billion-dollar jackpots
- The best strategies for winning the Mega Millions jackpot
The massive winnings also induce more people to buy tickets, adding to the jackpot. Americans are 15 times more likely to buy a ticket when the lottery's winnings climb toward $1 billion versus when the prize winnings are just $20 million, he said.
Even though it's tempting to buy a ticket — and to dream of what you'd do with the jackpot — participants have a better chance of being struck by lightning than winning the Mega Millions. The odds of winning Tuesday's drawing is about one in 302.5 million.
"To put it into perspective, the typical person who is a golfer would have about a 1-in-15,000 chance in making a hole-in-one on a particular hole," Matheson said. "So winning the Powerball or the Mega Millions is like getting two hole-in-ones in a row when playing golf."
- In:
- Mega Millions
- Lottery
Khristopher J. Brooks is a reporter for CBS MoneyWatch covering business, consumer and financial stories that range from economic inequality and housing issues to bankruptcies and the business of sports.
TwitterveryGood! (21)
Related
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley outlines her position on abortion: Let's humanize the issue
- Score a $58 Deal on $109 Worth of Peter Thomas Roth Products and Treat Your Skin to Luxurious Hydration
- A new lawsuit is challenging Florida Medicaid's exclusion of transgender health care
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- 2016’s Record Heat Not Possible Without Global Warming, Study Says
- Amputation in a 31,000-year-old skeleton may be a sign of prehistoric medical advances
- Viski Barware Essentials Worth Raising a Glass To: Shop Tumblers, Shakers, Bar Tools & More
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Driver charged after car jumps curb in NYC, killing pedestrian and injuring 4 others
Ranking
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- 2016’s Record Heat Not Possible Without Global Warming, Study Says
- Alberta’s New Climate Plan: What You Need to Know
- 3 Republican Former EPA Heads Rebuke Trump EPA on Climate Policy & Science
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Striving to outrace polio: What's it like living with the disease
- An E. coli outbreak possibly linked to Wendy's has expanded to six states
- Portland police deny online rumors linking six deaths to serial killer
Recommendation
Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
Utah district bans Bible in elementary and middle schools after complaint calls it sex-ridden
New York's subway now has a 'you do you' mask policy. It's getting a Bronx cheer
Whatever happened to the baby shot 3 times in the Kabul maternity hospital bombing?
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
The government will no longer be sending free COVID-19 tests to Americans
Tourists at Yellowstone picked up a baby elk and drove it in their car, officials say
These Mother's Day Gifts From Kardashian-Jenner Brands Will Make Mom Say You're Doing Amazing, Sweetie