Mega Millions is a multi-state game that costs $2 per play. Megaplier® is available as an add-on and costs an additional $1 per play.
Mega Millions has large jackpots and a second-tier prize of $1 million!
Drawings are held on Tuesdays and Fridays at approximately 10 p.m.
Next Drawing: Tuesday, Dec 24
Understanding Mega Millions Chances
No matter how many people play Mega Millions, the chances of winning never change. The chances of winning are based on the amount of number combinations, not the number of players. Quick Pick tickets are generated randomly by the terminal at the retailer, and there is no central computer that is controlling ticket generation.
Many people ask us to explain how their chances of winning are determined. So, let's start at the beginning!
The Mega Millions game is played by selecting five numbers out of 70 choices (the numbers from 1 to 70), and by selecting one extra number from 1 to 25 (that's the Mega Ball®). When it's time to draw the winning numbers, there are two machines tumbling the ball sets at the same time: one machine has the 70 white balls, and the other one has the 25 gold "Mega Balls®." So the Mega Millions game is like holding two drawings at the same time; two independent events played simultaneously. Any chances of winning has to consider what happens to the number selections within one drum combined with the possibilities of what's happening in the other drum. That idea is really important to keep in mind. A winning set of numbers will be whatever five balls are selected out of the white-ball drum, plus the one ball selected from the gold-ball drum.
But the chances of winning look confusing because even at the smallest winning level (just getting the Mega Ball® right), many people think the chances of winning that should be 1 in 25 (one correct choice out of a drum of 25 balls, right?). But we're not just playing that one drum; in order to say you "only matched the Mega Ball®" that means you have to have missed all five of the white balls that were chosen in that other drum! The chances of doing that combined with your 1-in-25 shot of getting the Mega Ball® actually come out to being about 1 in 36.6. In other words, there is about one chance in 37 that you'd pick the winning Mega Ball® number and miss selecting any of the five winning white-ball numbers.
So when you hear a "chances of winning" calculation, it's describing the chance that you will have chosen the winning numbers, including the chances you chose numbers that didn't get drawn. Since there are several ways to win (from zero to all five of the white balls, with and without having the Mega Ball®), that means people who calculate the chances of winning have to figure each level of winning or not winning in each of the two drums.
For example, in order to win the big jackpot, a winner must have chosen all five white balls correctly, as well as the Mega Ball® number. To describe the chances of winning, you have to say what your possible chances are of choosing the winning balls against choosing any of the 65 non-winning balls in the one drum, combined with your chances of choosing the winning Mega Millions against choosing any of the 24 non-winning " Mega Balls®"in that drum. That's a lot of combinations - more than 302.6 million, in fact. But there's an easy formula that gets you there.
Where Do You Start?
Any calculation of chances for a Lottery game involves three basic elements:
- The total number of balls (numbers) you are choosing from, which is called the field or (f).
- The number of balls the player selects on his\her playslip, which is called the pick or (p).
- The number of correct matches between the player's picks and the numbers drawn out of the machine, which is called the match (m).
The mathematical formula looks like this:
Each part of that formula, which is in parentheses, is a "binomial coefficient," which is a calculation on how many ways there are to make different combinations. In our case, we're talking about how many combinations of lottery balls you could make with a set of 70 (or 25) balls. What that means is that for whatever numbers you have, the binomial can be rewritten as follows:
X! means "x factorial"; for example, 5! is 5 x 4 x 3 x 2 x 1 = 120.
Mega Millions chances of winning the jackpot:
(5 of 5 plus the Mega Ball®)
Now we're ready to look at winning that jackpot!
To do that, we said you'd have to describe the chances of picking five numbers including 65 non-winning ones out of a total of 70. Then you combine that with the figure to describe your chances of picking one winning Mega Ball® number, including choosing 24 non-winning numbers. So using our binomials and factorials, it looks like this:
So, 70 x 69 x 68 x 67 x 66 = 1,452,361,680 and 5 x 4 x 3 x 2 x 1 = 120; divide one by the other:
1,452,361,680 / 120 = 12,103,014 (chances of 12,103,014 to 1 of picking all 5 white balls out of 70)
And don't forget that now we have to combine the possibilities of choosing the Mega Ball®, which we know is one in 25. That formula works just like the one above:
So, (12,103,014 / 1) x (25 / 1) = 302,575,350.
Now, that's just one win scenario: the big jackpot. But you can also win eight other prizes ranging from $2 to $1 million.
(In order to win a prize, your Mega Ball® number must at least match the Mega Ball® number drawn, or you must match at least three of the five white-ball numbers drawn.)
When you combine the chances of all those levels and all those combinations, it comes out to roughly 1 in 24.
So each player has a 1-in-24 chance to win any of the prizes (jackpot, $1 million, $10,000, $500, $200, $10, $4, or $2)!
We hope this helps to better explain the chances of winning the Mega Millions jackpot.