If you win the third-largest ever Mega Millions jackpot, here’s what you need to know

If you win the third-largest ever Mega Millions jackpot, here’s what you need to know

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What should you do with $1 billion?

The already-giant $810 million Mega Millions lottery jackpot ballooned to $1.02 billion after no one matched all six numbers Tuesday night and won the top prize.

Claiming that much money likely also will draw taxes, grifters, and friends and family members, advisors say. 

All that attention means the first and most important piece of financial advice likely is what you should not do if you hold the winning ticket. 

“Don’t shout your win from the rooftop,” Rob Burnette, financial and investment advisor at Outlook Financial Center in Troy, Ohio, said. “If you’re lucky enough to win the lottery, keep it quiet. Get organized and make a plan. Consider staying anonymous, if it’s a possibility.” 

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How much is the jackpot, when is the drawing, what are my chances of winning? 

The $1.02 billion prize is for winners who choose the annuity option, paid annually over 30 years. Most winners opt for the cash option, which for the next drawing Friday night is an estimated $602.5 million.

The single chance of matching all six numbers is roughly 1 in 303 million. Mega Millions tickets – which cost $2 each – are sold in 45 states plus the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Why shouldn’t you tell everyone? 

Scammers. 

“Some of those scammers have falsely identified themselves as being affiliated with Mega Millions,” Mega Millions said. “These scams all have one thing in common: They try to trick you into sending them money or personal information by claiming that you have won a large lottery prize.”  

No representative of Mega Millions would ever call, text, or e-mail anyone about winning a prize, Mega Millions said. 

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Also remember, “no real lottery tells winners to put up their own money in order to collect a prize they have already won,” it said. 

Steve Azoury, owner of Azoury Financial in Troy, Mich., said he has advised many lottery winners, including a $181 million winner “who said ‘If I didn’t know you before, I don’t want to know you now.’”  

If you can’t tell everyone you won, what can, or should you do? 

“Get a tax attorney and a tax accountant right off the bat and then a financial advisor,” said Azoury. “They’ll work hand in hand to figure out the plan.” 

The plan will include which payout option to choose:  

  • An annuity option makes an initial annual payment followed by 29 annual payments. Each payment is 5% larger than the previous one.  
  • The cash option is a one-time, lump-sum payment equal to all the cash in the Mega Millions jackpot prize pool.  

The plan also should include a “fall guy,” Azoury said. “That’s the person or advisor who keeps you from giving loans to anybody, who tells people all the money’s tied up in investments, not available. We have nothing available to help you out and we’re not interested in your project.” 

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Should you take the lump sum or installment payments? 

That decision depends on your goals, your age, and what lottery rules are for beneficiaries to continue receiving payments, or if you’d likely squander a lump sum. 

Mark Steber, chief tax officer at Jackson Hewitt, recommends considering the following: 

  • Size of the lottery winning: That can serve as

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