Wealth

Mega Millions jackpot surges to $785 million. If there’s a winner, this is the tax bill

Products You May Like

Anadolu Agency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

Mega Millions players may be daydreaming about what they’d do with an extra $785 million, the game’s current jackpot amount.

One way they should count on using it if they win? Sharing a slice with the IRS.

After no tickets matched all six numbers drawn Friday night, the jackpot climbed again, marking the fourth time in the game’s history that the top prize has gone above $700 million, according to Mega Millions officials. In the previous three instances, those jackpots ended up being worth more than $1 billion when they were won.

More from Personal Finance:
Key things for near retirees to know about health savings accounts
More changes to the U.S. retirement system are on their way
Here are some tips to build your emergency savings this year

The jackpot has been rolling higher through twice-weekly drawings since mid-October with no winner. If someone nabs it in the next drawing — set for Tuesday night — this $785 million prize would rank as the sixth-largest lottery prize ever won and the fourth-largest Mega Millions prize

Of course, the advertised amount is only what you’d get if you were to choose to take your winnings as an annuity spread over three decades. The lump-sum cash option — which most winners choose — for this jackpot is $403.8 million, as of midday Tuesday.

Regardless of how you’d decide to receive your windfall, taxes would take a bite out of it.

$96.9 million in taxes would be shaved off cash option

Assuming you’re like most winners and were to choose the cash option, a mandatory 24% federal tax withholding would reduce the $403.8 million by $96.9 million. That would cut your take to $306.9 million.

However, you could expect to owe more to the IRS at tax time. The top federal income tax rate is 37% and applies to income above $578,125 for individual tax filers and $693,750 for married couples who file a joint tax return.

This means that unless you were able to reduce your taxable income by, say, making large tax-deductible charitable contributions, you would owe another 13% — or about $52.5 million — at tax time. That would bring your winnings down to $254.4 million. 

There also could be state or local taxes depending on where the ticket was purchased and where you live. Those levies range from zero to more than 10%.

Most Mega Millions players, though, won’t have to worry about paying millions of dollars to the IRS or state coffers: The odds of a single ticket matching all six numbers to land the jackpot is about 1 in 302.6 million.

Meanwhile, the Powerball jackpot is $291 million (with a cash option of $147.9 million) for Wednesday night’s drawing. The chance of hitting the motherlode in that game is slightly better: 1 in 292 million.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Darden Restaurants stock climbs as Olive Garden, LongHorn Steakhouse fuel sales growth
Here’s what to know before ‘taking some risk off the table’ with bitcoin profits, advisor says
How Vuori reached a $5.5 billion valuation by taking share from Lululemon
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway scoops up Occidental and other stocks during sell-off
Biden administration withdraws student loan forgiveness plans. What borrowers should know

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *