How much would it cost to buy every powerball combination

How much would it cost to buy every powerball combination

This is one area of the lottery that you are directly in control of. So it’s a simple question, deserving a simple answer.

[A] Yes.

OK, maybe you want more answer for your money. 🙂

Buying more tickets instantly changes the odds of winning. It’s your No.1 sure fire way to do so. And it’s extremely simple to work out the increased chances of winning you get.

Does Buying 2 Lottery Tickets Double Your Odds/Chances?

Yes, buying two lottery tickets will double your odds over buying just the one ticket. The math proves this.

OK, that still means you only have a 2 in 13 million chance of winning (for a 6 from 49 game). But it’s still twice the chance you had before. The odds are doubled, your chances of winning are double.

Does Buying More Tickets Increase Odds?

Yes, buying more tickets increases odds further.

So if you buy three tickets you now have three times the chance. Buy a hundred tickets and you have, yes you guessed it, a hundred times the chance!

(Of course buying a hundred lottery tickets can be pretty expensive to do by yourself, which is why I suggest to friends that they consider playing in a syndicate. And yes syndicates do win pretty often – see How Often Do Syndicates Win the Lottery?).

Can You Buy Every Lottery Ticket Combination?

Technically yes you can buy every lottery ticket combination. Depending on the game this can be quite a lot of work or a vast effort requiring a whole team of people.

Pick 3 for example has 1,000 combinations – but Powerball has over 292 million.

How Much Would It Cost To Buy Every Powerball Combination?

Powerball has 292,201,338 different combinations. So at $2 per play, it would cost $584,402,676 to buy every Powerball combination.

And yes, that is more than $584 million. So if you’ve got that much spare to spend on tickets, you probably don’t need to bother playing anyway. 😉

Is It Possible To Buy Every Lottery Combination?

With a smaller game like Pick 3 it is of course possible. Buying 1,000 combinations takes a bit of work, but it can fairly easily be done.

Buying tickets for a larger game takes huge resources. Just consider how long it would take to generate millions of playslips. Then each of those playslips has to be put through a lottery machine. Even with a large team of people it would take days to process them.

Is Buying Every Lottery Combination a Good Idea?

Buying every lottery combination would of course mean that you will win the jackpot. Plus a whole bunch of other smaller prizes too.

But it’s not however a good strategy. Because the cost of tickets would normally be far greater than the total of the prizes you win. So overall you would lose money.

Does buying more lottery tickets increase your odds? Yes, buying more tickets does change your odds of winning. It also just happens to be the one of the best ways to boost your chances of winning. But it should always be considered together with your overall lottery strategy – as it’s just one piece of a much bigger pie.

Feb. 25, 1992

How much would it cost to buy every powerball combination

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There is a dream common among regular lottery players: to wait until the jackpot reaches an astronomical sum and then to buy every possible number, guaranteeing a winner.

Sure, it would cost millions of dollars. But the payoff would be much richer.

In Virginia this month, one investment group came tantalizingly close to cornering the market on all possible combinations of six numbers from 1 to 44. State lottery officials say that the group bought tickets for 5 million of a possible 7 million combinations, at $1 each, in a lottery with a $27 million jackpot. Only a lack of time prevented the group from buying tickets for the remaining 2 million combinations.

While no one has come forward with the one winning ticket in the Feb. 15 lottery, several clues point to the investment group, an Australian syndicate, as the winner. If that is so, the numbers 8, 11, 13, 15, 19 and 20 will yield a prize of $1.3 million a year for 20 years to the group.

Banking officials here say the money for the bulk purchase of Feb. 15 lottery tickets came from Australia. An Australian regulatory official also said a syndicate there had notified its investors that it had won an overseas jackpot. The winner has six months to claim the prize.

Virginia officials are worried enough about a repeat performance that they met today to debate a proposal that would block bulk sales of lottery tickets.

The governing board of the Virginia lottery held a public hearing today and received some criticism. Hans Smetona, a 22-year-old pizza deliveryman here, said, "No one wants to be in line behind anyone who's there for three or four days."

After the hearing, the lottery board adopted a recommendation to Gov. L. Douglas Wilder that sales agents be required to take orders from people in line before filling orders from absentee buyers. As a reason for the recommendation, officials cited the example of a store that put an out-of-order sign on its lottery terminal as an employee printed hundreds of tickets for the investors in the Feb. 15 lottery.

Executives of two retail chains that sold tickets in the Feb. 15 lottery to bulk purchasers said representatives of the investment group had visited them in the fall to discuss the logistics of a large lottery purchase. A. C. Miller, president of the Miller Oil Company, which owns one retail chain that sold $600,000 in tickets, the Miller Mart convenience stores, identified one representative as Anithalee Alex Jr. of Teutopolis, Ill.

Mr. Alex's telephone number there is unlisted. Art L. Kinkelaar, the Sheriff of Effingham C ounty, which includes Teutopolis, said he had no information about Mr. Alex, but added that the day before the drawing he received an inquiry about Mr. Alex's background from Virginia officials.

The bulk sales of lottery tickets began after Feb. 12 when the Virginia jackpot appeared headed for a record level. The state lottery director said agency computers showed a huge increase in sales beginning the next morning.

The players had until 11:15 P.M. on Feb. 15, five minutes before the drawing, to buy tickets. The lottery director said at least one store was still selling tickets at a brisk pace, 2,400 an hour, at the last minute. Even so, the group seems to have been caught without slips for two million possible combinations. 1 Ticket in 5 Million

"For someone to try to do this ticket-by-ticket is a very chancy proposition," said Michael E. Julian, chairman of Farm Fresh supermarkets, the second retailer, which got a $3 million order. "That's what lotto's all about."

The lucky ticket, which sold for $1 and is worth $27 million, was issued at a Farm Fresh that sold part of the huge batch bought from the chain.

"Watching them try to find the one winning ticket would be quite a sight," said Kenneth W. Thorson, the state lottery director.

In Virginia's six-number lottery, players pick six numbers from 1 to 44. The winning combination is determined by a machine.

Lottery officials speculate that the investors may have chosen Virginia for two reasons. The state had the biggest jackpot in the country that weekend. And the seven million entries required to cover all the combinations in a 44-number lottery is just half the number needed in a 49-number lottery, like Florida's. California has 51 numbers and New York has 54. Improving the Odds

William S. Bergman, executive director of the North American Association of State and Provincial Lotteries, said that 24 of the nation's 34 six-number lotteries have longer odds than those for Virginia's game.

In the Virginia game, there are 7,059,052 possible combinations of numbers. So someone who buys one ticket has odds of 1 in slightly more than 7 million. Having more tickets increases the odds of winning, so that 1 million tickets have odds of 1 in 7. Since each ticket costs $1 it would cost $7,059,052 to cover every combination. Anyone who did that would receive at least a share in the jackpot and many of the second, third and fourth place prizes, that together were worth more than $900,000 on Feb. 15.

The biggest danger to a huge lottery investor would be having to split the prize with other winners who had picked the same numbers. Mr. Thorson said some popular combinations have as many as 1,000 ticket holders.

Jackpots are paid out in 20 equal yearly installments. Winning the jackpot payment of $1.35 million a year for that period is equal to receiving a rate of return of about 16 percent on a $7 million investment. The second, third and fourth place prizes would increase that rate somewhat, as well as increasing the amount received in the first year. Biggest Known Purchase

Lottery experts and gaming administrators said that this was the largest-scale effort to buy tickets they knew of in the United States.

The previous record may have been held by a computer engineer who bought 80,000 tickets in October from a Jacksonville, Fla., bar called Smitty's Place. The bar owner said the man made a profit but did not win the $94 million jackpot. People in Jacksonville still call him "The Phantom."

In 1990, a retiree walked into a Sacramento, Calif., hardware store with a diaper bag stuffed with $20 bills. Employees spent all night printing out her 30,000 tickets for what was then a record state jackpot of $69 million.

"Since the notoriety of having the world's largest losing purchase, she hasn't come back much," said the store's assistant manager, James C. Cortell. A Huge Undertaking

In Virginia, trying to buy seven million lottery tickets would be a huge undertaking, even though outlets are allowed to be open 19 hours a day. Each game slip has room to select five combinations, so the first step would require filling out 1.4 million slips. Mr. Thorson, the state lottery director, said that he saw photocopies of several of the group's slips and that they appeared to have been filled out by hand.

The group used as many as eight chains of grocery and convenience stores, with a total of 125 outlets, in the Norfolk and Richmond areas, Mr. Thorson said. He said his agency notified state and Federal tax and law-enforcement officials about the unusual purchases. No apparant violations occurred, the officials said.

One chain, Farm Fresh, said it had sold 2.4 million tickets to a man who apparently managed the purchase for the group. The man went to the grocery chain's headquarters with cashier's checks for hundreds of thousands of dollars. The chain sent couriers to 40 stores to pick up the tickets. As identification, the messengers used the man's business card, with a code word added. The company's commission was $120,000, even though it returned $600,000 for tickets it did not have time to print.

Samuel W. Valenza Jr., the publisher of Lottery Player's Magazine in Cherry Hill, N.J., said Virginia officials should not have allowed retailers to help in the bulk purchases.

"It may not be against the rules, but it's not fair," Mr. Valenza said. "It's not the intent of the game to play against a player who has purchased all the tickets."

At its meeting today the governing board of the Virginia lottery discussed limiting block purchases. A lottery spokeswoman, Paula I. Otto, said the agency had received about six complaints from customers of stores involved in the block buying.

In the next 10 days the board plans to consider a proposal to limit a player to buying 100 lotto tickets when others are waiting in line. Another measure would limit a store to selling 50,000 tickets to a single customer for a drawing and a chain to selling 250,000 tickets. To enforce these measures if they are adopted, the board said it could turn off a store's terminals.

George W. Grayson, a Democrat who is a member of the House of Delegates, the state's legislature, said he might introduce a bill in the Legislature to require buyers of 10,000 or more tickets to identify themselves.

"These are hardly casual players and we want to make certain that tainted moneys aren't funneled into the Virginia lottery," said Dr. Grayson, who is a government professor at the College of William and Mary.

Mr. Bergman of the lottery association said that if restrictions were adopted, they would be the first in the country.

Lottery managers in several states said they had successfully discouraged players who asked about buying blocks of lottery tickets.

"It's not like we have a button on our computers that says, 'One of everything,' " said Betsy A. Bishop of the Vermont Lottery Commission.

A dozen lottery administrators said that buying masses of lottery tickers was a risky investment.

"A lottery's a good deal for a dollar," said Joanne B. McNabb of the California Lottery. "You can do something better with a million.

"All you have to do is share it with two people and it becomes a questionable investment," he said. "Share it with three and you've lost money."

An official familiar with the transaction said that Australians had wired $7 million to a Virginia bank, which then issued cashier's checks to buy the lottery tickets. An Australian regulatory official said today that a Melbourne-based syndicate had raised millions of dollars for investment in overseas lotteries. Timothy G. Phillipps of the Australian Securities Commission said that five days after the Virginia drawing, the syndicate sent its 2,500 investors this message: "Last weekend, one of our target lotteries did jackpot to our required level. We entered and won."

Mr. Phillipps said a prospectus for the goup had few details about expected returns beyond saying that a substantial cash return was expected and the investment would be in lotteries. "A lot them don't want to know a lot more than that," he said.

How many Powerball combinations exist?

Before calculating the odds for the different prize levels, calculate the total number of combinations possible for each portion of the PowerBall draw. Thus, there are 11,238,513 different ways in which 5 numbers can be chosen from a total of 69 unique numbers.

Do quick picks ever win the Powerball?

Use Quick Picks There might be something to this trick, considering that 70% of Powerball winners have been Quick Picks. This strategy is popular among winners who have won more than once, so it's worth trying out.

How many possible Mega Millions combinations are there?

There are 12,103,014 possible combinations of the first five numbers ranging from 1 to 70. Multiply that by the 25 options for the final ball and you get 302,575,350 possible Mega Millions tickets.

Has a rich person ever won the lottery?

His win of US$314.9 million in the Powerball multi-state lottery was, at the time, the largest jackpot ever won by a single winning ticket in the history of American lottery. ... Andrew Jackson Whittaker Jr..