Winning numbers for Mega Millions $1.35 billion jackpot announced

Mega Millions jackpot reaches $1.35 billion

The winning numbers for Friday's Mega Millions drawing — with a jackpot of $1.35 billion — have been announced. The winning numbers are: 30, 43, 45, 46, 61 and a Mega Ball of 14. 

Friday's drawing is for the the fourth-largest lottery jackpot ever, and the second-largest in Mega Millions history. It was still unclear if any winning tickets were sold. 

For nearly three months there has been no lottery winner, Mega Millions said, increasing the excitement for Friday's drawing. There have been 25 drawings since the Mega Millions jackpot was last won on Oct. 14.    

A single jackpot winner would have the choice of getting a lump-sum cash payout of an estimated $724.6 million before taxes. Or, they could take the annuity option, which would consist of 29 annual payments. Each annual payment would average about $45 million, according to the lottery resource website USA Mega

After federal taxes, and before state taxes, the lump-sum payment would come out to about $446 million, per USA Mega.

If there are multiple winners Friday, they would split the jackpot evenly.

A Mega Millions sign seen at a store in New York City on Jan. 12, 2023.  Fatih Aktas/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

In November, a single winning Powerball ticket sold in the Los Angeles metro area won a $2.04 billion jackpot, the largest in lottery history. 

A single South Carolina ticket claimed the largest Mega Millions jackpot ever at $1.537 billion in October 2018. And in July, a ticket sold in Illinois won a $1.337 billion Mega Millions jackpot, the third largest ever, if Friday's numbers hold.

The odds of winning the Mega Millions jackpot are 1 in 302.6 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," Holy Cross economics professor Victor Matheson told CBS News earlier this week. "So winning the Powerball or the Mega Millions is like getting two hole-in-ones in a row when playing golf."  

Matheson said that the Multi-State Lottery Association, a not-for-profit group that coordinates Mega Millions, purposefully engineered the game to generate large sums by making it more difficult to win the jackpot and increasing the price of each ticket from $1 to $2.

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