---
title: "Lottery Tax Calculator: How Much Will You Keep After Taxes?"
description: "Calculate taxes on lottery winnings. See your take-home after federal and state taxes for Powerball, Mega Millions — lump sum or annuity payout."
canonical_url: "https://www.themoneypocket.com/tools/lottery-tax-calculator"
last_updated: "2026-05-01T16:53:16.633Z"
---

## Lottery & Prize Winnings Tax Calculator

Enter your jackpot amount, payout preference, and state to instantly see your estimated federal and state taxes — and how much you actually take home.

<lottery-calculator>



</lottery-calculator>

## How Lottery Winnings Are Taxed

Lottery winnings are treated as **ordinary income** by the IRS, which means they're subject to the same federal income tax rates as wages — up to **37%** for large jackpots. On top of federal taxes, most states impose their own income tax on lottery prizes.

### Federal Tax on Lottery Winnings

The IRS requires lottery operators to **withhold 24%** at the time of payment for prizes over $5,000. However, because large jackpots push winners into the 37% bracket, the actual tax owed is almost always higher than what's withheld. The difference is due when you file your tax return.

<table>
<thead>
  <tr>
    <th>
      Prize Amount
    </th>
    
    <th>
      Federal Withholding
    </th>
    
    <th>
      Likely Tax Bracket
    </th>
    
    <th>
      Additional Tax Due
    </th>
  </tr>
</thead>

<tbody>
  <tr>
    <td>
      $5,001 – $11,925
    </td>
    
    <td>
      24%
    </td>
    
    <td>
      10–12%
    </td>
    
    <td>
      Likely refund
    </td>
  </tr>
  
  <tr>
    <td>
      $11,926 – $48,475
    </td>
    
    <td>
      24%
    </td>
    
    <td>
      12%
    </td>
    
    <td>
      Small balance
    </td>
  </tr>
  
  <tr>
    <td>
      $48,476 – $103,350
    </td>
    
    <td>
      24%
    </td>
    
    <td>
      22%
    </td>
    
    <td>
      Small balance
    </td>
  </tr>
  
  <tr>
    <td>
      Over $523,600
    </td>
    
    <td>
      24%
    </td>
    
    <td>
      37%
    </td>
    
    <td>
      ~13% additional
    </td>
  </tr>
</tbody>
</table>

### Lump Sum vs. Annuity: The Tax Difference

**Lump sum (cash option):** You receive roughly **52–60% of the advertised jackpot** immediately. The full lump sum is taxable in year one, pushing you into the top 37% bracket.

**Annuity:** You receive payments over 20–30 years. Each annual payment is taxable when received, but spread across years. If future tax rates rise, the annuity loses this advantage. Most winners choose the lump sum.

### State Taxes on Lottery Winnings

State taxes vary dramatically:

- **No state tax:** Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming
- **Low state tax (under 4%):** Arizona (2.5%), North Dakota (2.5%), Pennsylvania (3.07%)
- **High state tax (over 8%):** New York (10.9%), New Jersey (10.75%), Oregon (9.9%), Minnesota (9.85%), California (13.3%)

Note: Some states tax lottery winnings differently than regular income — always verify with your state's revenue department.

## Real-World Examples

### Example 1: $100 Million Powerball Jackpot

**Scenario:** Single filer, California resident, takes lump sum

- Advertised jackpot: $100,000,000
- Lump sum (60%): $60,000,000
- Federal tax (37%): -$22,200,000
- California state tax (13.3%): -$7,980,000
- **Take-home: ~$29,820,000**

### Example 2: $50,000 Prize Winner

**Scenario:** Married filing jointly, Texas (no state tax), $85,000 other income

- Prize: $50,000
- Combined income: $135,000
- Federal withholding (24%): -$12,000
- Effective federal rate on prize: ~22%
- Additional tax owed at filing: ~-$1,000 more
- **Take-home prize: ~$38,000**

## After-Tax Strategies for Lottery Winners

### 1. Bunch Charitable Donations

Donating a large portion of winnings to a donor-advised fund in year one can significantly reduce taxable income. Charitable deductions for cash gifts are limited to 60% of AGI.

### 2. Invest Intelligently

If you invest your lump sum in a diversified portfolio — as our calculator models at 7–8% annual returns — the after-tax lump sum can often outperform annuity payments over a 30-year horizon.

### 3. Move Before You Claim

Winners who have not yet claimed their prize can consider relocating to a no-income-tax state before claiming. This is complex — consult a tax attorney about your specific state's laws.

### 4. Form a Trust or LLC

Anonymous trusts can protect your identity (only in some states) and may offer estate planning benefits. An LLC can hold the prize, though taxes on the winnings themselves remain the same.

## Frequently Asked Questions

### Are lottery winnings taxed as ordinary income?

Yes. The IRS classifies lottery prizes as ordinary income, taxed at your marginal rate — which for large jackpots is 37%.

### Is the 24% withholding all I owe?

No. The 24% withheld is a deposit toward your total tax liability. If your winnings push you into the 37% bracket, you'll owe the remaining 13% when you file your tax return.

### Do I pay taxes on the annuity payments?

Yes. Each annual annuity payment is taxable as ordinary income in the year received. You do not pay tax on future payments upfront.

### Can lottery losses offset winnings?

Only if you're a professional gambler. Casual players can deduct gambling losses up to the amount of gambling winnings, but only if they itemize deductions.

### What happens if I share the winnings with family?

If you give winnings to family members, those gifts may be subject to the **gift tax** if they exceed $18,000 per person per year (2026 annual exclusion). Large gifts count against your lifetime exclusion ($13.99 million in 2026). Read our [gift tax guide](/tools/gift-tax-calculator) for details.

### Do foreign lottery winners pay US taxes?

Non-resident aliens who win a US lottery are subject to **30% US withholding** (or lower treaty rate) on US-source gambling winnings.

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For more strategies on minimizing taxes on investment income, see our [Capital Gains Tax Calculator](/tools/capital-gains-calculator) and [Tax Loss Harvesting Calculator](/tools/tax-loss-harvesting-calculator).
