Compare lottery lump sum vs annuity payments after taxes and inflation. Calculate NPV, break-even return rate, and see the full payment schedule.
When you win a lottery jackpot, you face a critical financial decision: take the lump sum cash option or receive annual payments over 20-30 years. The advertised jackpot represents the annuity total, while the cash option is typically 50-60% of that amount. Both are subject to federal and state income taxes, so the number on the billboard is not the number that lands in your account.
The right choice depends on tax rates, investment returns, inflation, and personal circumstances. The annuity provides guaranteed income and protects against overspending, but the lump sum — if invested wisely — can potentially grow to more than the annuity total. However, you need to account for taxes on both options and the time value of money, because a dollar received years from now is not the same as a dollar received today.
This calculator computes the after-tax value of both options, calculates the NPV of the annuity payment stream, and finds the break-even investment return rate — the minimum return you'd need on the lump sum to match the annuity's value. The payment schedule tracks both the annuity payments and the lump sum investment balance year by year, which makes the comparison easier to evaluate before a large decision is made.
The advertised jackpot is misleading — you never receive that amount. This calculator cuts through the marketing to show you the true after-tax, inflation-adjusted comparison between lump sum and annuity options so you can make a mathematically sound decision. That is useful because the right choice depends on tax brackets, expected returns, and whether you want guaranteed payments or a single investable balance.
Use it when you need to compare the two payout structures in a way that reflects real purchasing power rather than a headline number. It keeps the tax, return, and timing assumptions visible so the decision is easier to justify.
Annuity NPV = Σ(Net Payment_t / (1 + r)^t) Net Payment = Gross Payment × (1 − Total Tax Rate) Gross Payment_t = First Payment × (1 + growth)^(t−1) Break-Even Return = Rate where Lump Sum After Tax = Annuity NPV
Result: Annuity NPV ≈ $149M vs Lump $167M → Lump Sum wins
At a 7% investment return, the $289M lump sum (after 42% taxes = $167M) exceeds the NPV of 30 years of graduated annuity payments ($149M). The break-even is about 5.3% — below that, the annuity wins.
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The advertised jackpot is the total of all annuity payments. The cash option is the present value the lottery uses to buy the annuity, typically 50-60% of the headline number, so the advertised figure is not the cash value.
Yes. Federal tax applies (top bracket 37%), plus state income tax. Some states have no state income tax on lottery winnings, which can materially change the lump-sum comparison.
A diversified stock/bond portfolio historically returns 7-10% before taxes. After taxes on investment gains, 5-7% is more conservative and is often a better planning assumption.
Powerball and Mega Millions annuities increase 5% per year. Some state lotteries pay equal annual installments, so the schedule depends on the specific game.
Most lottery annuities are guaranteed, so remaining payments go to your estate or beneficiaries. However, they cannot be sold or transferred in all states, which is why the estate rules matter.
About 80% of jackpot winners choose the lump sum. Financial advisors often recommend it for disciplined investors, but the annuity protects against overspending and removes reinvestment risk.