fbpx
Wikipedia

Pennsylvania Lottery

The Pennsylvania Lottery is operated by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The Lottery was created by the Pennsylvania General Assembly on August 26, 1971;[1] two months later, Henry Kaplan was appointed as its first executive director. The Pennsylvania Lottery sold its first tickets on March 7, 1972 and drew its first numbers on March 15, 1972.[2]

Pennsylvania Lottery
Agency overview
FormedAugust 26, 1971
JurisdictionPennsylvania
HeadquartersMiddletown, Pennsylvania, U.S.
MottoBenefits Older Pennsylvanians. Every Day.
Agency executives
  • Drew Svitko, Executive Director
  • Jim Sawyer, Security Director
  • Ewa Swope, Press Secretary
Parent agencyPennsylvania Department of Revenue
Websitewww.palottery.state.pa.us

Lottery proceeds edit

By Pennsylvania law, at least 40 percent of Lottery proceeds are required to be paid as prizes, with another 27 percent towards funding programs. Currently, the Pennsylvania Lottery exceeds these requirements, as 60.9 percent is paid as prizes, 29.9 percent to programs, 6.7 percent is paid as retailer and vendor commissions and 2.5 percent is consumed as operating expenses.[citation needed]

For the 2009–2010 fiscal year, approximately $3.065 billion in gross revenue was acquired through proceeds and interest.[citation needed] Approximately $1.87 billion was paid as prizes, $915.7 million to programs, $207 million was paid as retailer and vendor commissions, and $76.6 million was paid to advertising and operations. The gross revenue for fiscal year 2009–2010 represented an increase of approximately 59 percent in sales over fiscal year 2001–02.[citation needed]

The Pennsylvania Lottery is the only US lottery that targets all of its proceeds to programs for its elderly residents. Since the beginning of the Lottery in 1972, more than $20.1 billion has been contributed to programs.

In 2017, following a revenue decrease exceeding $75 million for the fiscal year 2016–2017, Pennsylvania passed a gaming expansion bill that authorized the sale of online lottery products.[3] Governor Tom Wolf's budget plan for 2018 said that he and the state would use new revenues to "re-establish a $75 million reserve fund."[4]

Pennsylvania-only draw games edit

Pick 2 edit

Pick 2 is a two-digit (0–9) game which debuted on January 27, 2015. (Concurrent with the introduction of Pick 2, the Daily Number, Big 4, and Quinto were renamed to Pick 3, Pick 4, and Pick 5, respectively.) Pick 2 is drawn twice daily (at 1:10 p.m. ET, with the numbers posted on the Lottery's website after 1:35 p.m. ET, and on a live televised drawing at 6:59 p.m. ET), seven days a week. The minimum play is $1, and tickets can be purchased up to seven days in advance.

Pick 2 can be played in four basic ways:

Bet Probability Prize
Straight 1:100 $50
Box 1:50 $25
Front digit 1:10 $5
Back digit 1:10 $5

Pick 3 (formerly The Daily Number) edit

Pick 3 debuted on March 1, 1977 as The Daily Number. It is a three-digit (0–9) game, drawn twice a day (at 1:10 p.m. ET, with the numbers posted on the Lottery's website after 1:35 p.m. ET, and on a live televised drawing at 6:59 p.m. ET), seven days a week. Single tickets can be purchased in increments of 50¢, up to $5.00. Tickets can be purchased up to seven days in advance.

Pick 3 can be played in five basic ways:

Way to play To play To win Payout
Straight The player chooses any three digits. If the three digits, and their order, match the winning number drawn, the player wins. 500 to 1
Boxed If the three digits, regardless of their order, match the winning number, the player wins. 80 to 1
The payout differs if a winning boxed number includes two of the same digit. 160 to 1
Front Pair The player chooses any two digits. If the two digits, and their order, match the front (left) two digits of the winning number, the player wins. 50 to 1
Back Pair If the two digits, and their order, match the back (right) two digits of the winning number, the player wins. 50 to 1
Super Straight The player chooses any three digits. The online system plays all six possible combinations (if all three digits are different) of the number. Consequently, tickets cost six times the normal price of a ticket. A win is, therefore, treated like a Straight win. 500 to 1
If a Super Straight number includes two of the same digit, the cost is three times that of the regular cost, since there are only three possible winning combinations (instead of six).

Pick 4 (formerly Big 4) edit

Pick 4 debuted on November 22, 1980 as Big 4. It is a four-digit game, drawn twice a day (at 1:10 p.m. ET, with the numbers posted on the Lottery's website after 1:35 p.m. ET, and on the live televised drawing at 6:59 p.m. ET), seven days a week. Single tickets can be purchased for the same amounts as in Pick 3, up to seven days in advance.

Pick 4 can be played in two basic ways:

Way to play To play To win Payout
Straight The player chooses any four digits. If the four digits, and their order, match the winning number drawn, the player wins. 5,000 to 1
Boxed If the four digits match (in this case four different digits), regardless of their order, match the winning number, the player wins. 200 to 1
A winning boxed number including three of the same digit (regardless of the remaining single digit). 1,200 to 1
A winning boxed number including two pairs of digits. 800 to 1
A winning boxed number including one pair of digits (regardless of the other two digits). 400 to 1

Pick 5 (formerly Quinto) edit

Pick 5's first drawing was on August 26, 2008, under the name Quinto. It is a five-digit game, drawn twice a day (at 1:10 p.m. ET, with the numbers posted on the Lottery's website after 1:35 p.m. ET, and on the live televised drawing at 6:59 p.m. ET), seven days a week. The minimum play in Pick 5 is $1. Players can purchase tickets up to seven days in advance.

Odds and payouts for Pick 5 are as follows:

Bet Probability Prize
Straight 1:100,000 $50,000
5 Way Box 1:20,000 $10,000
10 Way Box 1:10,000 $5,000
20 Way Box 1:5,000 $2,500
30 Way Box 1:3,333.3 $1,700
60 Way Box 1:1,666.7 $850
120 Way Box 1:833.3 $425
Front 4 1:10,000 $5,000
Back 4 1:10,000 $5,000
Front 3 1:1,000 $500
Back 3 1:1,000 $500
Front Pair 1:100 $50
Back Pair 1:100 $50

Wild Ball edit

The Wild Ball is an add-on to the Pick 2, Pick 3, Pick 4, and Pick 5 games introduced on September 13, 2016. Activating the Wild Ball doubles the cost of the play.

Before the Pick games are drawn, one digit from 0 through 9 is drawn and designated as the Wild Ball number. The Wild Ball number may then be used by the player to replace any one digit in any of the Pick games. For instance, if the player selects 123 in the Pick 3 game, and the number actually drawn is 124, but the Wild Ball is a 3, the player may replace the 4 with a 3 to create a winning combination.

Because the Wild Ball creates additional ways to win, a win using the Wild Ball generally pays a lesser amount than a win using the base play (with the exceptions of the front and back digit plays in Pick 2), however, a player can win both from the Wild Ball and from the base play if the Wild Ball matches one of the digits naturally.

Payouts using the Wild Ball are as follows:

Pick 2 edit

Bet Probability Prize
Straight 1:50 $30
Box 1:25 $15
Front digit 1:10 $6
Back digit 1:10 $6

Pick 3 edit

Bet Probability Payout
Straight 1:333.33 200 to 1
6-way Box 1:55.56 36 to 1
3-way Box 1:111.11 72 to 1
Front Pair 1:50 30 to 1
Back Pair 1:50 30 to 1

Pick 4 edit

Bet Probability Payout
Straight 1:2,500 1,500 to 1
4-way Box 1:625 390 to 1
6-way Box 1:416.67 260 to 1
12-way Box 1:208.33 130 to 1
24-way Box 1:104.17 60 to 1

Pick 5 edit

Bet Probability Prize
Straight 1:20,000 $12,000
5 Way Box 1:4,000 $2,400
10 Way Box 1:2,000 $1,200
20 Way Box 1:1,000 $600
30 Way Box 1:666.67 $400
60 Way Box 1:333.33 $200
120 Way Box 1:166.67 $100
Front 4 1:2,500 $1,500
Back 4 1:2,500 $1,500
Front 3 1:333.33 $200
Back 3 1:333.33 $200
Front Pair 1:50 $30
Back Pair 1:50 $30

Treasure Hunt edit

Treasure Hunt's first drawing was on May 8, 2007. It involves selecting five numbers from 1 through 30. It is drawn daily at 1:10 p.m. ET, and the results are released at 1:35 p.m. ET on the Lottery's website. It is the Lottery's only game held exclusively during the non-televised midday drawings, as well as its only game always selected via a computer instead of printed balls. The minimum jackpot is $10,000, although sales often allow the actual prize level to be higher. Prizes are also won by matching four, three, or two of the winning numbers. Treasure Hunt has a payout percentage of 58%.

Numbers matched Probability Payout
5 of 5 1:142,506 Jackpot
4 of 5 1:1,140.05 $100
3 of 5 1:47.5 $6
2 of 5 1:6.2 $1

Overall odds of winning are 1 in 5.45.

Cash 5 edit

Cash 5 consists of picking five numbers from 1 through 43 (originally 1-39). It is drawn during the live televised nighttime drawings at 6:59 p.m. ET, seven days a week. Games cost $2 each(previously $1); tickets can be purchased up to seven days in advance. The minimum jackpot is $150,000 (originally $100,000, then $125,000), increasing until there is a 5-of-5 winner. Cash 5 jackpots also are always paid in lump sum. This game began on April 23, 1992, as a weekly game. It gradually expanded with its popularity.

Cash 5 has four available prize amounts:

Numbers matched Probability Payout
5 of 5 1:962,598.00 Jackpot, divided among all 5-of-5 winners.
4 of 5 1:5,066.30 Fixed at $200
3 of 5 1:136.90 Fixed at $10
2 of 5 1:11.40 Fixed at $2

Starting on March 23, 2021, the price per play increased to $2, and all second through fourth-level prizes became fixed amounts ($200, $10, and $2, respectively). Concurrent with this change, a “Quick Cash” feature was added, in which a second ticket, similar to a Fast Play ticket (see below) would be printed with one play of Quick Cash given for each play of Cash 5 purchased. Matching any of five “winning numbers” to any of five “your numbers” in the same play, wins the prize of either $2 or $6.

Match 6 edit

Match 6 consists of picking 6 numbers, from 1 through 49. It is drawn during the live televised Lottery drawings at 6:59 p.m. ET. Nightly Players get three games for $2 (see below); betters can play in increments up to 26 drawings. The jackpot begins at $500,000; it always is paid in a lump sum.

Players automatically receive two free "quick picks" for each $2 played; unlike the former game Super 6 (see below), the automatic quick-picks are necessary. This is because, in addition to winning in the normal fashion (matching at least three numbers in one game, "base play"), a player also can win by matching enough numbers on all 3 lines ("combined play"). In "combined play", the 18 numbers across the three lines often repeat. Only when there are enough "repeats" across the three lines is it possible to win the highest possible prize in the "all three lines category" (see list of prize amounts).

Match 6 has 11 available prize amounts:

Numbers matched Probability Payout
6 of 6 1:4,661,272.3 Jackpot amount
5 of 6 1:18,067.3 $1,000
4 of 6 1:344.5 $20
3 of 6 1:19.2 $2
10+ of 18 1:597,302.6 $2,500
9 of 18 1:45,267.4 $1,000
8 of 18 1:4,440.4 $50
7 of 18 1:590.9 $25
6 of 18 1:106.7 $10
5 of 18 1:26.4 $5
4 of 18 1:9.1 $2

The overall probability of winning on a $2 play is approximately 1 in 5.9.

Match 6 originally ran from January 28, 2004 to March 10, 2009. The final jackpot of this run was $900,000, and was won by one set of six numbers. The jackpot would have rolled down if there had been no winner. Match 6 was replaced by the revival of Super 7, which in turn was retired on April 31, 2010, due to poor sales.

On June 1, 2010, however, Match 6 returned, this time replacing Mix & Match. Match 6's gameplay did not change from the previous version, although the drawing days are different from before. It was formerly drawn on Mondays and Thursdays, and also formerly Tuesdays and Fridays. It also has an average payout of 57.95%, up from 53% in the previous version. This extra money goes into the jackpot, as the lower tier prize amounts did not change.

On August 28, 2017, Match 6 increased the frequency of drawings to seven nights per week. This made Pennsylvania one of the fewest lotteries to have all of its draw-games held daily.

Keno edit

Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf signed a gaming expansion bill on October 30, 2017, making it possible for the lottery to offer Keno.[5]

Keno games went live on May 1, 2018 at hundreds of locations throughout the state.[6]

iLottery edit

In May 2018, the Pennsylvania Lottery launched internet lottery games. The suite of products, known as the Pennsylvania iLottery, includes a variety of scratch-off games that reveal lottery ticket results online.[7]

In August 2018, seven Pennsylvania casinos filed a lawsuit to shut the iLottery program down, citing similarities to slot machines which casinos have exclusive rights to offering in the state. The lottery has continued to offer these games, as this style of scratch-off tickets are considered sufficiently different from online casino slot machines in other jurisdictions with similar products.[8]

Xpress Sports edit

The Pennsylvania Lottery has been offering Xpress Sports' Racing and Football since the summer of 2018. Similar to keno, the virtual sports games are displayed on monitors at select locations and run every few minutes.

Derby Cash edit

On November 19, 2019, the Pennsylvania Lottery began offering Derby Cash, a virtual horse racing game. The virtual races run every 5 minutes and can be bought at all lottery retailers and watched at over 2,000 locations.[9]

Multi-state games offered in Pennsylvania edit

Cash4Life edit

Pennsylvania joined Cash4Life on April 7, 2015; it began in New Jersey and New York the previous year. (The game also is available in Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Maryland, Missouri, Tennessee, and Virginia.)

Players choose 5 of 60 numbers in one field, and 1 of 4 green "Cash Ball" numbers in the second field. Cash4Life drawings are held live on Monday to Sunday evenings at 9pm Eastern Time on Livestream.[10][11][12] The top prize (win or share) $1,000-per-day-for-life, or the cash option. Second prize is $1,000-per-week-for-life or the cash option.

Mega Millions edit

Mega Millions was originally known as The Big Game, which began in 1996. The current name was adopted in 2002. On October 13, 2009, an agreement was reached between the Mega Millions and Powerball groups. On January 31, 2010, Pennsylvania was among the lotteries that added the "other" game, in this case Mega Millions, on the cross-sell expansion date. Forty-six lotteries, including those of the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands, currently offer both games.[13]

The current Mega Millions game requires players to choose 5 of 70 "white ball" numbers, and a gold-colored "Mega Ball" from a pool of 25 numbers. Plays remain $2 each, or $3 if the Megaplier is activated. Mega Millions is drawn Tuesday and Friday nights.

The first Mega Millions drawing that included Pennsylvania (held on February 2, 2010) produced three winners of $250,000; two were in areas new to the game: one each in Connecticut and Pennsylvania. Neither ticket holder had activated the Megaplier, which would have won $1,000,000, as the Megaplier was 4. Eventually, a second-prize Mega Millions ticket with Megaplier activated was guaranteed to win $1,000,000, regardless of the multiplier drawn.

Powerball edit

Pennsylvania joined Powerball in 2002; it was MUSL's most-populous member until Florida joined in 2009.

The current Powerball game requires players to choose 5 of 69 "white ball" numbers, and a red-colored "Powerball" from a pool of 26 numbers. Plays are $2 each, or $3 if Power Play is activated. Powerball is drawn Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday nights.

Recurring games edit

Millionaire Raffle edit

The Millionaire Raffle is normally offered annually. Tickets cost $20; each ticket is assigned a unique eight-digit number starting from 00000001 (quantities being limited). Numbers are assigned in the order that the tickets are purchased; thus, the 100,000th ticket purchased for a given raffle will have the number 00100000. At the drawings, the four $1,000,000-winning ticket numbers, as well as the second prize winners, are drawn by random number generator. As of November 2021, there have been 30 Millionaire Raffles.

Retired Draw Games edit

The Pennsylvania Lottery has offered several games which would later be discontinued due to low sales and/or relative obsolescence.

These games include (in order of introduction):

(Wild Card) Lotto edit

Lotto was the third game and the first jackpot game offered by the Pennsylvania Lottery, and replaced the traditional "passive draw" games. The first version ran from April 1982 until February 1988.[14] The game was played by selecting 6 numbers from a field of 40. Players got two games for $1, having to play an even number of games. Players won the jackpot, which was paid in 21 annual installments (with no cash option), by matching the first six numbers drawn. Players won by matching at least four of the first six numbers drawn. Players also would win by matching 5 of the first 6, plus a seventh, "alternate", number if no game matched the first six numbers.[15]

The prize structure with one or more jackpot winners was as follows:

Matches Prize Category Avg. Prize % of Sales Odds (per $1)
6 of 6 Regular First Prize Jackpot 24.5% 1:1,919,190
5 of 6 + Alternate Alternate First Prize* $0 0% 1:319,865
5 of 6 Second Prize $921.50 9.80% 1:9,407.79
4 of 6 Third Prize $33.50 14.70% 1:228.07
*Alternate 1st Prize available if there were no jackpot winner(s) Overall odds of winning: 1 in 222.644

The prize structure with no jackpot winner was as follows:

Matches Prize Category Avg. Prize % of Sales Odds (per $1)
6 of 6 Regular First Prize Jackpot 19.6% (carried over to next draw) 1:1,919,190
5 of 6 + Alternate Alternate First Prize* $15,673.00 4.9% 1:319,865
5 of 6 Second Prize $921.50 9.80% 1:9,407.79
4 of 6 Third Prize $33.50 14.70% 1:228.07
*Alternate 1st Prize available if there were no jackpot winners Overall odds of winning: 1 in 222.644

In February 1988, the game became Wild Card Lotto (WCL). The game's changes included the addition of two prize categories and a "permanent" prize for matching 5 of the first 6 numbers drawn along with the "alternate" number (now called the "Wild Card Number").

The new game was played by selecting 6 numbers from 48. Players continued to get two plays for $1, again having to purchase games in pairs. Drawings were now Tuesdays and Fridays. Prizes were won by matching at least four numbers, with or without the "Wild Card" number. The jackpot continued to be paid in 21 annual payments with no cash option.[16]

The first WCL prize structure:

Matches Avg. Prize % of Sales Odds ($1 purchase)
6 of 6 Jackpot 29.4% 1:6,135,756
5 of 6 + Wild Card $25,054.00 2.45% 1:1,022,626
5 of 6 $1,099.50 4.41% 1:24,942.10
4 of 6 + Wild Card $488.50 4.90% 1:9,976.84
4 of 6 $24.00 4.90% 1:498.84
3 of 6 + Wild Card $11.00 2.94% 1:374.13
Overall odds of winning: 1 in 207.5135

On October 31, 1995, the Friday drawing was dropped, only to be reinstated on March 12, 1996. On March 26, 1996, Pennsylvania's first cash option was introduced; WCL players were now required when purchasing tickets (instead of after winning, as in present-day Cash4Life, Mega Millions, or Powerball) to choose between receiving a jackpot prize in the 21-payment annuity or in a lump sum.

On February 24, 1998, the game went through a final overhaul. A seventh prize category was added, a $1 prize for matching 3 of the first 6 numbers. The percentage of sales allocated to the jackpot also increased. The remaining prize categories were decreased as a result.[17]

Matches Avg. Prize % of 49% Prize Pool Odds (per $1)
6 of 6 Jackpot 74.17% After Deduction of 3-of-6 Prize 1:6,135,756
5 of 6 + Wild Card $20,041.50 4.305% After Deduction of 3-of-6 Prize 1:1,022,626
5 of 6 $488.50 4.305% After Deduction of 3-of-6 Prize 1:24,942.10
4 of 6 + Wild Card $195.50 4.305% After Deduction of 3-of-6 Prize 1:9,976.84
4 of 6 $19.50 8.61% After Deduction of 3-of-6 Prize 1:498.84
3 of 6 + Wild Card $7.00 4.305% After Deduction of 3-of-6 Prize 1:374.13
3 of 6 $1.00 (Fixed) 1:28.78
Overall odds: 1 in 25.274

The game held its last drawing on September 4, 1998. The game, along with Keystone Jackpot, was replaced with Super 6 Lotto (see below for both games).

Super 7 (1986–1995) edit

Super 7, a jackpot game similar to keno, was originally introduced on August 14, 1986. The first draw was on August 20, 1986.

The original Super 7 was played by selecting 7 of 80 numbers. Jackpots started at $2 million and increased in increments of $1,000,000 until it was won; each game cost $1. On Wednesday nights, the Lottery drew 11 numbers. If a player matched 7 of the 11 drawn, they won a jackpot that was paid in 26 installments; unlike the 2009-2010 revival of Super 7, there was no cash option. All prizes were parimutuel. The original Super 7's odds were as follows:

Matches on Ticket Avg. Prize % of 49% Prize Pool Odds
7 of 7 Jackpot 70% after deduction of 4-of-7 prize 1: 9,626,413.3
6 of 7 $4,503.00 10% after deduction of 4-of-7 prize 1: 99,652.3
5 of 7 $264.50 20% after deduction of 4-of-7 prize 1: 2,930.9
4 of 7 $7.00 (fixed) 1: 183.7
Overall odds of winning: 1 in 172.591†

†The overall odds when the game first began was 1 in 2,846.367 as the first few drawings did not have a 4/7 prize.

On April 10, 1991, the game's format was changed, with 10 numbers drawn instead of 11 and 74 numbers to choose from instead of 80. Players still selected 7 numbers for each game.

The prize structure from April 10, 1991, to game's end was as follows:[18]

Matches on Ticket Avg. Prize % of 49% Prize Pool Odds
7 of 7 Jackpot 70% 1: 14,996,492.2
6 of 7 $2,479.00 25% after deduction of jackpot & 4-of-7 prize 1: 133,897.3
5 of 7 $196.50 75% after deduction of jackpot & 4-of-7 prize 1: 3,542.3
4 of 7 $15.00 (fixed) 1: 205.7
Overall odds of winning: 1 in 194.108

On July 10, 1993, drawings were moved from Wednesdays to Saturdays.

The Lottery held the last drawing of the original Super 7 on October 28, 1995. This game was replaced by Keystone Jackpot (see below for information on that game)

Saturday/Million Dollar Spin (1987–1998) edit

The original Saturday Spin was weekly beginning on March 7, 1987. Each week, five players who had won a "free ticket" prize had their names on a special wheel, the player whose name the wheel stopped on would win $50,000 or $100,000 in cash, or a $1 million annuity. The other 4 finalists left the weekly drawing empty handed.

On May 5, 1990, Saturday Spin was changed to Million Dollar Spin. In the second version of the game, 10 players who had won a "free ticket" prize were selected for the weekly drawing and a second wheel selected a prize of $50,000, $75,000, or $100,000 cash or a $1,000,000 annuity. Each of the other nine finalists received $5,000.

Million Dollar Spin was played until December 26, 1998. On the final drawing, all prize values were doubled.

Hearts & Diamonds edit

Hearts & Diamonds began on October 5, 1994.

The game involved selecting 5 of 26 playing cards (from the hearts and diamonds suits only; hence the name). This is the only Pennsylvania Lottery game to date (including raffles) where all ticket selections were by "quick-pick". The game was also Pennsylvania's first to be drawn by random number generator (computer) as opposed to mechanical ball machine(s); this method would later be employed, to draw Midday games.

The prize structure was:[19]

Matches Avg. Prize % of Sales Odds
5 of 5 $20,062.50 30.5% 1:65,780
4 of 5 $72.00 11.5% 1:626.5
3 of 5 $2.50 8.0% 1:31.3
Overall odds: 1 in 29.819

Hearts & Diamonds ended on March 10, 1996.

Keystone Jackpot edit

Keystone Jackpot began on October 29, 1995, replacing the original Super 7. Keystone Jackpot was the first single-state game in the U.S. to draw from two number pools; it also is the only U.S. game to date using two number pools drawing a total of seven numbers.

Keystone Jackpot was played by selecting 6 of 33 numbers in the first pool, and a seventh, blue, Key Ball from another field of 33. To win, players needed to match 4 or more white ball numbers drawn with or without the key ball number or, as in Mega Millions or Powerball, automatically winning by matching the Key Ball with 3, 2, 1 or 0 white balls drawn. Jackpots were paid in 26 installments; there was never a cash option (although Pennsylvania's first cash option began during Keystone Jackpot's run). Games cost $1 each.

The prize structure went as follows:[20]

Matches Avg. Prize % of Sales Odds
6 + Key Ball Jackpot 29.3412% 1:36,549,744
6 $77,793.50 6.811% 1:1,142,179.5
5 + Key Ball $7,771.50 3.4447% 1:225,615.7
5 $77.00 1.0927% 1:7,050.5
4 + Key Ball $77.00 1.1074% 1:6,942.0
4 $7.00 3.2291% 1:216.9
3 + Key Ball $7.00 1.1221% 1:624.8
2 + Key Ball $1.00 1.47% 1:138.8
1 + Key Ball $1.00 2.7% 1:75.5
Key Ball only $1.00 1.65% 1:123.5
Overall odds: 1 in 28.526

Keystone Jackpot underwent no changes during its history; its final drawing was held September 5, 1998, being replaced by Super 6.

Super 6 edit

Super 6 began on September 5, 1998, replacing Wild Card Lotto and Keystone Jackpot.

Super 6 was one of the first jackpot games in North America where players received automatic "Quick Picks", instead of being allowed to choose all of their numbers. Players selected 6 numbers from 1 through 69 in each game panel, receiving two "free plays" of automatic Quick-Picks, for a total of 3 plays for $1. Matching all 6 numbers in a game, won a jackpot, paid either in 26 installments or, if selected when playing, in a lump sum. Players won by matching at least 3 numbers in a game panel.

The prize pool was arranged as follows:[21]

Matches Avg. Prize % of Sales Odds ($1 play)
6 of 6 Jackpot 39.52% 1:39,959,157.33
5 of 6 $4,397.50 4.16% 1:105,712.06
4 of 6 $53.00 3.90% 1:1,364.03
3 of 6 $2.00 4.42% 1:50.31
Overall odds: 1 in 48.5

Overall odds: 1 in 48.5

Its drawings were initially held on Wednesdays and Saturdays, later moving to Tuesdays and Fridays shortly after Pennsylvania joined the multi state Powerball game in 2002.

Super 6's final drawing was on January 27, 2004. It was replaced by the current game, Match 6 Lotto.

Lucky for Life edit

Lucky for Life (the PA lottery version) began on September 28, 2004;[22] its first drawing was held on September 30.

Lucky for Life was played by picking 6 of 38 numbers; each game cost $2. Players won by matching 3 or more numbers, and/or the game's "instant win" feature. Matching all 6 numbers won an annuity prize of $3,000 per month, with a $1 million guarantee. There was no cash option, which may have led to the game being retired within three years.

The prize structure was as follows:

Matches Prize Odds
6 of 6 $3,000/month 1:2,760,681
5 of 6 $2,000 1:14,378.5
4 of 6 $40 1:371.1
3 of 6 $3 1:27.8
Overall odds: 1 in 25.841
Instant win $10 1:20.0
Overall odds (with Instant Win): 1 in 11.5

The game’s drawings were held on Mondays and Thursdays.

The game ended on January 22, 2007, replaced with Mix & Match, which lasted until May 31, 2010.

Despite Lucky for Life (not related to the current multi-state game of that name) not being a total success, Pennsylvania joined the multi-state Cash4Life on April 7, 2015. Unlike the Pennsylvania LFL, Cash4Life has two lifetime prize tiers; winners of either can choose the lifetime annuity or the cash option.

Super 7 (2009–2010) edit

Super 7 was re-introduced on March 11, 2009; the first drawing of the Super 7 revival was two nights later. It was a revival of the game of the same name which ran from 1986 to 1995.

This version of Super 7 was played by selecting seven numbers from a field of 77, with each selection costing $2. Every Tuesday and Friday night during the live evening televised drawings at 6:59 p.m. ET, the Lottery drew 11 numbers from 77 numbered balls. If all 7 numbers on a player's ticket matched any 7 of the 11 balls drawn, the player won a jackpot that is paid either in 30 annual installments, or in lump sum, depending on the player's choice. Unlike in Mega Millions or Powerball, where the jackpot choice is made after winning, Super 7 players were required to make the choice when playing; the payment option could not be changed after winning. Except for the $2 fifth prize, all payouts were parimutuel.

The prize structure was as follows:

Numbers matched Probability Payout Average prize (if known)
7 of 11 1:7,287,298 Varies; 48.16% after deduction of fifth-level ($2) prizes, divided among all 7-of-11 winners.
6 of 11 1:78,866.9 Varies; 13.42% after deduction of fifth-level ($2) prizes, divided among all 6-of-11 winners. $10,000
5 of 11 1:2,426.7 Varies; 21.81% after deduction of fifth-level ($2) prizes, divided among all 5-of-11 winners. $500
4 of 11 1:159.3 Varies; 16.61% after deduction of fifth-level ($2) prizes, divided among all 4-of-11 winners. $25
3 of 11 1:20.2 Fixed at $2
Overall odds of winning: 1 in 17.81

The payout percentage in Super 7 is 52.19% (the original Super 7's payout percentage was 49%).

On April 13, 2010, the Pennsylvania Lottery announced that the revival of Super 7, which had begun just over a year earlier, would hold its final drawing on April 27, 2010. The Lottery cited the addition of Mega Millions to its portfolio early in the year; Super 7 was drawn on Tuesday and Friday nights, the same as Mega Millions. The jackpot was not won the final drawing; the jackpot rolled down to those matching at least 4 numbers (those matching 3 numbers won $2). Super 7 was not replaced, although, about a month later, an updated version of Match 6 replaced Mix & Match.

Mix & Match edit

Mix & Match involved selecting five numbers from 1 through 19, as well as the order in which they will be drawn. There were two ways to win: A) for matching three or more numbers in any order ("mixing"), and B) for matching at least one number in its correct position ("matching".) The jackpot started at $50,000 (lump sum) and was won by matching all five numbers in the order in which they were drawn. Games cost $2 each. Mix & Match was drawn during the live nighttime televised drawings at 6:58:50 p.m. ET Mondays and Thursdays.[23]

Numbers matched in exact order ("Match") Probability Payout
5 of 5 1:1,395,360 Jackpot
4 of 5 1:19,934 $1,000
3 of 5 1:661.3 $100
2 of 5 1:22.75 $4
1 of 5 1:4.77 Free Ticket
Numbers matched in any order ("Mix") Probability Payout
5 of 5 1:11,268 $2,000
4 of 5 1:166 $20
3 of 5 1:12.8 $2

Overall odds of winning were 1 in 3.57.

The Lottery had planned to retire Mix & Match on November 3, 2009, replacing it with a new game, Double Play. These plans were put on hold by Lottery officials the previous month, and Double Play ultimately never materialized.

Mix & Match did eventually end, however. It held its final drawing on May 31, 2010, and was replaced by a revival of Match 6.

Monopoly Millionaires' Club edit

Pennsylvania was among 23 jurisdictions participating in the launch of the Monopoly Millionaires' Club (MMC) multistate drawing game on October 19, 2014. The game was drawn Fridays beginning October 24. With the December 12 drawing, Texas suspended sales of MMC tickets; the 22 other MMC members participated in two more drawings. (A game show featuring MMC players had episodes taped; they aired beginning March 28, 2015) Pennsylvania's MMC payouts for the final drawing were pari-mutuel, and were much higher than the fixed payouts for each prize tier.

In late March 2015, MMC returned as a scratch-off game; as of April 6, there were nine lotteries offering it. Pennsylvania had committed to offering the $5 instant game; as with the draw game, players of the MMC scratch ticket could win a trip-for-two to Las Vegas to participate in a taping of the MMC television game show, which was hosted by Mike & Molly's Billy Gardell, a native of Pittsburgh.

The MMC scratch game (which varied by state) and TV game show were discontinued in 2016.

Instant games edit

Besides offering terminal-based games, the Pennsylvania Lottery has many instant games (such tickets are usually referred to as "scratch off tickets"). Approximately 42% of Lottery proceeds are from instant ticket sales. The Lottery website maintains an updated list. [1]

The Pennsylvania Lottery uses an animatronic groundhog called "Gus", who claims that he is the "second-most-famous groundhog in Pennsylvania" (after Punxsutawney Phil), as the mascot for instant games in television commercials which appear around the beginning of every month.[24]

Pennsylvania instant games range in price from $1 to $50. Typically, higher-priced tickets offer better odds of winning, higher top prizes (up to $1 million for a $20 game; $2,500,000 cash or a $3 million annuity for a $25 game, $3 million cash for a $30 game, and $5 million cash for a $50 game), and a higher payout percentage. Payouts range from 57% of sales ($1 tickets) to 76.94% ($30 tickets), to over 80% ($50 tickets).

Originally, a winning ticket was denoted by two matching letters in the play area. Later, this was updated to the winning amount being highlighted with parentheses at the top or bottom of the play area, in order, but not necessarily consecutively; for example, a $100 winner would be denoted (1)(0)(0). Still later, three letters were scattered around the play area, spelling out the winning amount; for example, a prize of $100 is denoted H U N; losing tickets are denoted with a combination of: B, J, K, P, Q, and Z. Any prize over $2,500 on newer tickets is denoted with the letters "C L M" for "claim"; tickets released prior to July 2008 used C L M for amounts over $500. Starting with tickets released at the end of November 2010, tickets no longer have validation codes; an area marked "Scratch to Cash" must be scratched off by the player, revealing a bar code. Concurrent with the removal of validation codes, the Pennsylvania lottery also removed "benday," a random pattern of squiggly lines used as a security feature.[citation needed]

Fast Play edit

On February 28, 2017, the Pennsylvania Lottery began offering "Fast Play" games.[25] A Fast Play game is printed from a lottery terminal, however, it is played in a similar manner to the instant games. Typically, the player must match one or more numbers or symbols to the designated winning symbols in order to win. Currently, Fast Play games are offered at price points of $1, $2, $3, $5, $10, $20, and $30.

Certain Fast Play games may offer a progressive jackpot which increases with each ticket sold until a jackpot winning ticket is generated, at which point the jackpot resets to a base amount.

Political impact edit

A 2016 study of winners of the Pennsylvania Lottery found that its winners had an increased probability of shifting towards the right of the political spectrum. The largest effect was found among winners who were not yet registered to vote. Upon registering, they were 9.6% more likely to register as Republicans than non-winners. This suggests that positive economic shocks have a greater political impact on individuals who are not typically involved in politics or have indistinct political allegiances.[26]

Lottery offices edit

The Pennsylvania Lottery maintains seven lottery offices, including its headquarters:

Claiming a winning ticket edit

Pennsylvania Lottery retailers can pay prizes up to $2,500. (Until June 30, 2008, the maximum on such tickets was $500.) Claiming a prize of $600 or more requires filling out a standard claim form and sending it to Lottery headquarters. For instant games that make annuity payments, as well as the top prizes in Cash 5, etc. a claim should be filed at an area lottery office. For Mega Millionaire or Powerball jackpots, or either “life” prize in Cash4Life, a claim must be filed at Lottery headquarters.

Winnings and taxes edit

When filing a standard claim form, the claimant, the retailer, and the Pennsylvania Lottery each receive a copy (the form is triplicate). The Lottery then reports all winnings to the IRS. For federal income tax purposes, any lottery winnings over $2,500 in a fiscal year are taxable. However, when the winning amount is greater than $5,000, the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue withholds the proper amount of federal income tax before a check is mailed to the claimant. Pennsylvania Lottery winnings by Pennsylvania residents are exempt from state tax; however, winnings may be subject to local taxes for residents of some municipalities (e.g. Philadelphia).[27]

Triple Six Fix of 1980 edit

The host of the Pennsylvania Lottery drawings, Nick Perry, and seven others participated in a plot to "rig" The Daily Number, colloquially known as the "Triple Six Fix." On the night of April 24, 1980, the number 666 was drawn; of the then-record $3.5 million payout, $1.8 million was "paid" to those that were in on the fix. Lottery authorities became suspicious after rumors began that the drawing was fixed. Ticket sales showed a heavy bias towards combinations of only 4s and 6s in that drawing. Perry, in conjunction with Peter and Jack Maragos, Jerry Hammer, and five other men either were convicted or entered plea-bargains for their involvement.

Game show edit

To celebrate the Lottery's 25th anniversary in 1997, Jonathan Goodson, who, at the time produced several other lottery game shows, produced a Pennsylvania Lottery game show, with a format similar to Illinois Instant Riches. The show was hosted by former American Bandstand, and later several incarnations of the Pyramid game show series, Dick Clark, assisted by Gigi Gordon. Players won up to $365,000 on the show; two of its games were Vortex and Freefall, both from Illinois Instant Riches (though Vortex debuted on Bonus Bonanza in Massachusetts).

The special show aired on:

  • Harrisburg - WGAL
  • Philadelphia - WPVI
  • Pittsburgh - KDKA

Drawings edit

All Pennsylvania Lottery drawings are supervised by Harrisburg-based Zelenkofske Axelrod. Previous auditors of the drawings include the firms KPMG Hernwick, Boyer & Ritter, Wooton & Kneisley, the Huber Group, and Akryoyd and Associates. Each drawing features a senior citizen witness aged 55 and older.[28] From March 2020 to June 2021, and again from August 2021 to March 2022, due to the COVID-19 Pandemic, the senior citizen witnesses were replaced by members of the television station. The drawings last 90 seconds on weekdays, two minutes on Saturdays and one minute on Sundays. The mid-day drawing lasts 45 seconds. Like most US lotteries, the Pennsylvania Lottery broadcasts drawings on a network of broadcast television stations: WTAJ-TV (Altoona), WPXI (Pittsburgh), WGAL (Lancaster), WJET-TV (Erie), WTXF-TV (Philadelphia), and WNEP-TV (Scranton).[29] Portions of the Commonwealth, particularly in the Northern Tier, are unable to see the drawings because they are served by television markets in New York (e.g. the Bradford region, which has some stations from Erie, but not WJET). Regions such as these can see the Mega Millions and Powerball drawings on the national cable and satellite feed of WGN America. Pennsylvania's midday drawings are only viewable online. Because New Jersey does not have a station that airs Mega Millions nor Powerball drawings, WTXF-TV airs the aforementioned drawings for Central and Southern New Jersey as well.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Title 4". The official website for the Pennsylvania General Assembly. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
  2. ^ Beers, Paul B. (1 November 2010). Pennsylvania Politics Today and Yesterday: The Tolerable Accommodation. Penn State Press. ISBN 978-0-271-04498-9.
  3. ^ "Pennsylvania Online Gambling: Answers And Analysis". Online Poker Report. 28 October 2017. Retrieved 27 February 2018.
  4. ^ "PA Governor: Lottery Will Get A Big Boost From Launch Of Online Games". Online Poker Report. 19 February 2018. Retrieved 27 February 2018.
  5. ^ "PA Officially Becomes Fourth State To Legalize Online Poker, Casinos". Online Poker Report. 30 October 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  6. ^ "PA Lottery Launches Keno; Virtual Sports And Online Lottery Games On Way - Online Poker Report". Online Poker Report. 2 May 2018. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  7. ^ "PA Lottery Bonus Code August 2018: WINNER To Claim $5 Free". Bonus Code PA. 16 August 2018. Retrieved 28 August 2018.
  8. ^ "Seven PA Casinos File Lawsuit Against The iLottery- BonusCodePA". Bonus Code PA. 23 August 2018. Retrieved 28 August 2018.
  9. ^ https://www.palottery.state.pa.us/About-PA-Lottery/News-Events-Media/News/2019/November/Pennsylvania-Lottery-Launches-Derby-Cash-Horse-Rac.aspx
  10. ^ https://www.njlottery.com/en-us/drawgames/cash4life.html#tab-howToPlay
  11. ^ "Cash4Life by CASH4LIFE".
  12. ^ "New York Lottery: Cash4Life". Nylottery.ny.gov. Archived from the original on 25 June 2014. Retrieved 25 June 2014. (press release)
  13. ^ . www.palottery.state.pa.us. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011.
  14. ^ History of the Pennsylvania Lottery
  15. ^
  16. ^
  17. ^ Pennsylvania Bulletin Doc. No. 98-265
  18. ^
  19. ^
  20. ^
  21. ^
  22. ^
  23. ^ An Assessment of the Impact of Slots Gaming on Pennsylvania Lottery ...Pennsylvania. General Assembly. Legislative Budget and Finance Committee - 2008 - According to the Pennsylvania Lottery, Mix & Match was designed to bridge the product gap between the Daily Number and Big 4 prizes and the Cash 5 jackpot. ...
  24. ^ PA Lottery's advertising agency's web page about Gus Retrieved July 2, 2010
  25. ^ . www.palottery.state.pa.us. Archived from the original on 2 March 2017. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
  26. ^ Margalit, Yotam (11 May 2019). "Political Responses to Economic Shocks". Annual Review of Political Science. 22 (1): 277–295. doi:10.1146/annurev-polisci-050517-110713. ISSN 1094-2939.
  27. ^ City of Philadelphia Department of Revenue. "School Income Tax". Phila.gov. Retrieved 14 February 2019. Taxable forms of unearned income include dividends, royalties, short-term rental income, cash lottery winnings from the Pennsylvania Lottery, and some types of interest.
  28. ^ "Lottery Drawing Procedures" (PDF). Pennsylvania Lottery. 10 November 2010. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
  29. ^ "When and Where Can I See the Live Drawings?". Pennsylvania Lottery. Retrieved 14 July 2015.

External links edit

  • Pennsylvania Lottery

pennsylvania, lottery, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, availa. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message The Pennsylvania Lottery is operated by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania The Lottery was created by the Pennsylvania General Assembly on August 26 1971 1 two months later Henry Kaplan was appointed as its first executive director The Pennsylvania Lottery sold its first tickets on March 7 1972 and drew its first numbers on March 15 1972 2 Pennsylvania LotteryAgency overviewFormedAugust 26 1971JurisdictionPennsylvaniaHeadquartersMiddletown Pennsylvania U S MottoBenefits Older Pennsylvanians Every Day Agency executivesDrew Svitko Executive DirectorJim Sawyer Security DirectorEwa Swope Press SecretaryParent agencyPennsylvania Department of RevenueWebsitewww wbr palottery wbr state wbr pa wbr us Contents 1 Lottery proceeds 2 Pennsylvania only draw games 2 1 Pick 2 2 2 Pick 3 formerly The Daily Number 2 3 Pick 4 formerly Big 4 2 4 Pick 5 formerly Quinto 2 5 Wild Ball 2 5 1 Pick 2 2 5 2 Pick 3 2 5 3 Pick 4 2 5 4 Pick 5 2 6 Treasure Hunt 2 7 Cash 5 2 8 Match 6 2 9 Keno 2 10 iLottery 2 11 Xpress Sports 2 12 Derby Cash 3 Multi state games offered in Pennsylvania 3 1 Cash4Life 3 2 Mega Millions 3 3 Powerball 4 Recurring games 4 1 Millionaire Raffle 5 Retired Draw Games 5 1 Wild Card Lotto 5 2 Super 7 1986 1995 5 3 Saturday Million Dollar Spin 1987 1998 5 4 Hearts amp Diamonds 5 5 Keystone Jackpot 5 6 Super 6 5 7 Lucky for Life 5 8 Super 7 2009 2010 5 9 Mix amp Match 5 10 Monopoly Millionaires Club 6 Instant games 7 Fast Play 8 Political impact 9 Lottery offices 10 Claiming a winning ticket 11 Winnings and taxes 12 Triple Six Fix of 1980 13 Game show 14 Drawings 15 See also 16 References 17 External linksLottery proceeds editBy Pennsylvania law at least 40 percent of Lottery proceeds are required to be paid as prizes with another 27 percent towards funding programs Currently the Pennsylvania Lottery exceeds these requirements as 60 9 percent is paid as prizes 29 9 percent to programs 6 7 percent is paid as retailer and vendor commissions and 2 5 percent is consumed as operating expenses citation needed For the 2009 2010 fiscal year approximately 3 065 billion in gross revenue was acquired through proceeds and interest citation needed Approximately 1 87 billion was paid as prizes 915 7 million to programs 207 million was paid as retailer and vendor commissions and 76 6 million was paid to advertising and operations The gross revenue for fiscal year 2009 2010 represented an increase of approximately 59 percent in sales over fiscal year 2001 02 citation needed The Pennsylvania Lottery is the only US lottery that targets all of its proceeds to programs for its elderly residents Since the beginning of the Lottery in 1972 more than 20 1 billion has been contributed to programs In 2017 following a revenue decrease exceeding 75 million for the fiscal year 2016 2017 Pennsylvania passed a gaming expansion bill that authorized the sale of online lottery products 3 Governor Tom Wolf s budget plan for 2018 said that he and the state would use new revenues to re establish a 75 million reserve fund 4 Pennsylvania only draw games editPick 2 edit Pick 2 is a two digit 0 9 game which debuted on January 27 2015 Concurrent with the introduction of Pick 2 the Daily Number Big 4 and Quinto were renamed to Pick 3 Pick 4 and Pick 5 respectively Pick 2 is drawn twice daily at 1 10 p m ET with the numbers posted on the Lottery s website after 1 35 p m ET and on a live televised drawing at 6 59 p m ET seven days a week The minimum play is 1 and tickets can be purchased up to seven days in advance Pick 2 can be played in four basic ways Bet Probability Prize Straight 1 100 50 Box 1 50 25 Front digit 1 10 5 Back digit 1 10 5 Pick 3 formerly The Daily Number edit Pick 3 debuted on March 1 1977 as The Daily Number It is a three digit 0 9 game drawn twice a day at 1 10 p m ET with the numbers posted on the Lottery s website after 1 35 p m ET and on a live televised drawing at 6 59 p m ET seven days a week Single tickets can be purchased in increments of 50 up to 5 00 Tickets can be purchased up to seven days in advance Pick 3 can be played in five basic ways Way to play To play To win Payout Straight The player chooses any three digits If the three digits and their order match the winning number drawn the player wins 500 to 1 Boxed If the three digits regardless of their order match the winning number the player wins 80 to 1 The payout differs if a winning boxed number includes two of the same digit 160 to 1 Front Pair The player chooses any two digits If the two digits and their order match the front left two digits of the winning number the player wins 50 to 1 Back Pair If the two digits and their order match the back right two digits of the winning number the player wins 50 to 1 Super Straight The player chooses any three digits The online system plays all six possible combinations if all three digits are different of the number Consequently tickets cost six times the normal price of a ticket A win is therefore treated like a Straight win 500 to 1 If a Super Straight number includes two of the same digit the cost is three times that of the regular cost since there are only three possible winning combinations instead of six Pick 4 formerly Big 4 edit Pick 4 debuted on November 22 1980 as Big 4 It is a four digit game drawn twice a day at 1 10 p m ET with the numbers posted on the Lottery s website after 1 35 p m ET and on the live televised drawing at 6 59 p m ET seven days a week Single tickets can be purchased for the same amounts as in Pick 3 up to seven days in advance Pick 4 can be played in two basic ways Way to play To play To win Payout Straight The player chooses any four digits If the four digits and their order match the winning number drawn the player wins 5 000 to 1 Boxed If the four digits match in this case four different digits regardless of their order match the winning number the player wins 200 to 1 A winning boxed number including three of the same digit regardless of the remaining single digit 1 200 to 1 A winning boxed number including two pairs of digits 800 to 1 A winning boxed number including one pair of digits regardless of the other two digits 400 to 1 Pick 5 formerly Quinto edit Pick 5 s first drawing was on August 26 2008 under the name Quinto It is a five digit game drawn twice a day at 1 10 p m ET with the numbers posted on the Lottery s website after 1 35 p m ET and on the live televised drawing at 6 59 p m ET seven days a week The minimum play in Pick 5 is 1 Players can purchase tickets up to seven days in advance Odds and payouts for Pick 5 are as follows Bet Probability Prize Straight 1 100 000 50 000 5 Way Box 1 20 000 10 000 10 Way Box 1 10 000 5 000 20 Way Box 1 5 000 2 500 30 Way Box 1 3 333 3 1 700 60 Way Box 1 1 666 7 850 120 Way Box 1 833 3 425 Front 4 1 10 000 5 000 Back 4 1 10 000 5 000 Front 3 1 1 000 500 Back 3 1 1 000 500 Front Pair 1 100 50 Back Pair 1 100 50 Wild Ball edit The Wild Ball is an add on to the Pick 2 Pick 3 Pick 4 and Pick 5 games introduced on September 13 2016 Activating the Wild Ball doubles the cost of the play Before the Pick games are drawn one digit from 0 through 9 is drawn and designated as the Wild Ball number The Wild Ball number may then be used by the player to replace any one digit in any of the Pick games For instance if the player selects 123 in the Pick 3 game and the number actually drawn is 124 but the Wild Ball is a 3 the player may replace the 4 with a 3 to create a winning combination Because the Wild Ball creates additional ways to win a win using the Wild Ball generally pays a lesser amount than a win using the base play with the exceptions of the front and back digit plays in Pick 2 however a player can win both from the Wild Ball and from the base play if the Wild Ball matches one of the digits naturally Payouts using the Wild Ball are as follows Pick 2 edit Bet Probability Prize Straight 1 50 30 Box 1 25 15 Front digit 1 10 6 Back digit 1 10 6 Pick 3 edit Bet Probability Payout Straight 1 333 33 200 to 1 6 way Box 1 55 56 36 to 1 3 way Box 1 111 11 72 to 1 Front Pair 1 50 30 to 1 Back Pair 1 50 30 to 1 Pick 4 edit Bet Probability Payout Straight 1 2 500 1 500 to 1 4 way Box 1 625 390 to 1 6 way Box 1 416 67 260 to 1 12 way Box 1 208 33 130 to 1 24 way Box 1 104 17 60 to 1 Pick 5 edit Bet Probability Prize Straight 1 20 000 12 000 5 Way Box 1 4 000 2 400 10 Way Box 1 2 000 1 200 20 Way Box 1 1 000 600 30 Way Box 1 666 67 400 60 Way Box 1 333 33 200 120 Way Box 1 166 67 100 Front 4 1 2 500 1 500 Back 4 1 2 500 1 500 Front 3 1 333 33 200 Back 3 1 333 33 200 Front Pair 1 50 30 Back Pair 1 50 30 Treasure Hunt edit Treasure Hunt s first drawing was on May 8 2007 It involves selecting five numbers from 1 through 30 It is drawn daily at 1 10 p m ET and the results are released at 1 35 p m ET on the Lottery s website It is the Lottery s only game held exclusively during the non televised midday drawings as well as its only game always selected via a computer instead of printed balls The minimum jackpot is 10 000 although sales often allow the actual prize level to be higher Prizes are also won by matching four three or two of the winning numbers Treasure Hunt has a payout percentage of 58 Numbers matched Probability Payout 5 of 5 1 142 506 Jackpot 4 of 5 1 1 140 05 100 3 of 5 1 47 5 6 2 of 5 1 6 2 1 Overall odds of winning are 1 in 5 45 Cash 5 edit Cash 5 consists of picking five numbers from 1 through 43 originally 1 39 It is drawn during the live televised nighttime drawings at 6 59 p m ET seven days a week Games cost 2 each previously 1 tickets can be purchased up to seven days in advance The minimum jackpot is 150 000 originally 100 000 then 125 000 increasing until there is a 5 of 5 winner Cash 5 jackpots also are always paid in lump sum This game began on April 23 1992 as a weekly game It gradually expanded with its popularity Cash 5 has four available prize amounts Numbers matched Probability Payout 5 of 5 1 962 598 00 Jackpot divided among all 5 of 5 winners 4 of 5 1 5 066 30 Fixed at 200 3 of 5 1 136 90 Fixed at 10 2 of 5 1 11 40 Fixed at 2 Starting on March 23 2021 the price per play increased to 2 and all second through fourth level prizes became fixed amounts 200 10 and 2 respectively Concurrent with this change a Quick Cash feature was added in which a second ticket similar to a Fast Play ticket see below would be printed with one play of Quick Cash given for each play of Cash 5 purchased Matching any of five winning numbers to any of five your numbers in the same play wins the prize of either 2 or 6 Match 6 edit Match 6 consists of picking 6 numbers from 1 through 49 It is drawn during the live televised Lottery drawings at 6 59 p m ET Nightly Players get three games for 2 see below betters can play in increments up to 26 drawings The jackpot begins at 500 000 it always is paid in a lump sum Players automatically receive two free quick picks for each 2 played unlike the former game Super 6 see below the automatic quick picks are necessary This is because in addition to winning in the normal fashion matching at least three numbers in one game base play a player also can win by matching enough numbers on all 3 lines combined play In combined play the 18 numbers across the three lines often repeat Only when there are enough repeats across the three lines is it possible to win the highest possible prize in the all three lines category see list of prize amounts Match 6 has 11 available prize amounts Numbers matched Probability Payout 6 of 6 1 4 661 272 3 Jackpot amount 5 of 6 1 18 067 3 1 000 4 of 6 1 344 5 20 3 of 6 1 19 2 2 10 of 18 1 597 302 6 2 500 9 of 18 1 45 267 4 1 000 8 of 18 1 4 440 4 50 7 of 18 1 590 9 25 6 of 18 1 106 7 10 5 of 18 1 26 4 5 4 of 18 1 9 1 2 The overall probability of winning on a 2 play is approximately 1 in 5 9 Match 6 originally ran from January 28 2004 to March 10 2009 The final jackpot of this run was 900 000 and was won by one set of six numbers The jackpot would have rolled down if there had been no winner Match 6 was replaced by the revival of Super 7 which in turn was retired on April 31 2010 due to poor sales On June 1 2010 however Match 6 returned this time replacing Mix amp Match Match 6 s gameplay did not change from the previous version although the drawing days are different from before It was formerly drawn on Mondays and Thursdays and also formerly Tuesdays and Fridays It also has an average payout of 57 95 up from 53 in the previous version This extra money goes into the jackpot as the lower tier prize amounts did not change On August 28 2017 Match 6 increased the frequency of drawings to seven nights per week This made Pennsylvania one of the fewest lotteries to have all of its draw games held daily Keno edit Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf signed a gaming expansion bill on October 30 2017 making it possible for the lottery to offer Keno 5 Keno games went live on May 1 2018 at hundreds of locations throughout the state 6 iLottery edit In May 2018 the Pennsylvania Lottery launched internet lottery games The suite of products known as the Pennsylvania iLottery includes a variety of scratch off games that reveal lottery ticket results online 7 In August 2018 seven Pennsylvania casinos filed a lawsuit to shut the iLottery program down citing similarities to slot machines which casinos have exclusive rights to offering in the state The lottery has continued to offer these games as this style of scratch off tickets are considered sufficiently different from online casino slot machines in other jurisdictions with similar products 8 Xpress Sports edit The Pennsylvania Lottery has been offering Xpress Sports Racing and Football since the summer of 2018 Similar to keno the virtual sports games are displayed on monitors at select locations and run every few minutes Derby Cash edit On November 19 2019 the Pennsylvania Lottery began offering Derby Cash a virtual horse racing game The virtual races run every 5 minutes and can be bought at all lottery retailers and watched at over 2 000 locations 9 Multi state games offered in Pennsylvania editCash4Life edit Main article Cash4Life Pennsylvania joined Cash4Life on April 7 2015 it began in New Jersey and New York the previous year The game also is available in Florida Georgia Indiana Maryland Missouri Tennessee and Virginia Players choose 5 of 60 numbers in one field and 1 of 4 green Cash Ball numbers in the second field Cash4Life drawings are held live on Monday to Sunday evenings at 9pm Eastern Time on Livestream 10 11 12 The top prize win or share 1 000 per day for life or the cash option Second prize is 1 000 per week for life or the cash option Mega Millions edit Main article Mega Millions Mega Millions was originally known as The Big Game which began in 1996 The current name was adopted in 2002 On October 13 2009 an agreement was reached between the Mega Millions and Powerball groups On January 31 2010 Pennsylvania was among the lotteries that added the other game in this case Mega Millions on the cross sell expansion date Forty six lotteries including those of the District of Columbia and the U S Virgin Islands currently offer both games 13 The current Mega Millions game requires players to choose 5 of 70 white ball numbers and a gold colored Mega Ball from a pool of 25 numbers Plays remain 2 each or 3 if the Megaplier is activated Mega Millions is drawn Tuesday and Friday nights The first Mega Millions drawing that included Pennsylvania held on February 2 2010 produced three winners of 250 000 two were in areas new to the game one each in Connecticut and Pennsylvania Neither ticket holder had activated the Megaplier which would have won 1 000 000 as the Megaplier was 4 Eventually a second prize Mega Millions ticket with Megaplier activated was guaranteed to win 1 000 000 regardless of the multiplier drawn Powerball edit Main article Powerball Pennsylvania joined Powerball in 2002 it was MUSL s most populous member until Florida joined in 2009 The current Powerball game requires players to choose 5 of 69 white ball numbers and a red colored Powerball from a pool of 26 numbers Plays are 2 each or 3 if Power Play is activated Powerball is drawn Monday Wednesday and Saturday nights Recurring games editMillionaire Raffle edit The Millionaire Raffle is normally offered annually Tickets cost 20 each ticket is assigned a unique eight digit number starting from 00000001 quantities being limited Numbers are assigned in the order that the tickets are purchased thus the 100 000th ticket purchased for a given raffle will have the number 00100000 At the drawings the four 1 000 000 winning ticket numbers as well as the second prize winners are drawn by random number generator As of November 2021 there have been 30 Millionaire Raffles Retired Draw Games editThe Pennsylvania Lottery has offered several games which would later be discontinued due to low sales and or relative obsolescence These games include in order of introduction Wild Card Lotto edit Lotto was the third game and the first jackpot game offered by the Pennsylvania Lottery and replaced the traditional passive draw games The first version ran from April 1982 until February 1988 14 The game was played by selecting 6 numbers from a field of 40 Players got two games for 1 having to play an even number of games Players won the jackpot which was paid in 21 annual installments with no cash option by matching the first six numbers drawn Players won by matching at least four of the first six numbers drawn Players also would win by matching 5 of the first 6 plus a seventh alternate number if no game matched the first six numbers 15 The prize structure with one or more jackpot winners was as follows Matches Prize Category Avg Prize of Sales Odds per 1 6 of 6 Regular First Prize Jackpot 24 5 1 1 919 190 5 of 6 Alternate Alternate First Prize 0 0 1 319 865 5 of 6 Second Prize 921 50 9 80 1 9 407 79 4 of 6 Third Prize 33 50 14 70 1 228 07 Alternate 1st Prize available if there were no jackpot winner s Overall odds of winning 1 in 222 644 The prize structure with no jackpot winner was as follows Matches Prize Category Avg Prize of Sales Odds per 1 6 of 6 Regular First Prize Jackpot 19 6 carried over to next draw 1 1 919 190 5 of 6 Alternate Alternate First Prize 15 673 00 4 9 1 319 865 5 of 6 Second Prize 921 50 9 80 1 9 407 79 4 of 6 Third Prize 33 50 14 70 1 228 07 Alternate 1st Prize available if there were no jackpot winners Overall odds of winning 1 in 222 644 In February 1988 the game became Wild Card Lotto WCL The game s changes included the addition of two prize categories and a permanent prize for matching 5 of the first 6 numbers drawn along with the alternate number now called the Wild Card Number The new game was played by selecting 6 numbers from 48 Players continued to get two plays for 1 again having to purchase games in pairs Drawings were now Tuesdays and Fridays Prizes were won by matching at least four numbers with or without the Wild Card number The jackpot continued to be paid in 21 annual payments with no cash option 16 The first WCL prize structure Matches Avg Prize of Sales Odds 1 purchase 6 of 6 Jackpot 29 4 1 6 135 756 5 of 6 Wild Card 25 054 00 2 45 1 1 022 626 5 of 6 1 099 50 4 41 1 24 942 10 4 of 6 Wild Card 488 50 4 90 1 9 976 84 4 of 6 24 00 4 90 1 498 84 3 of 6 Wild Card 11 00 2 94 1 374 13 Overall odds of winning 1 in 207 5135 On October 31 1995 the Friday drawing was dropped only to be reinstated on March 12 1996 On March 26 1996 Pennsylvania s first cash option was introduced WCL players were now required when purchasing tickets instead of after winning as in present day Cash4Life Mega Millions or Powerball to choose between receiving a jackpot prize in the 21 payment annuity or in a lump sum On February 24 1998 the game went through a final overhaul A seventh prize category was added a 1 prize for matching 3 of the first 6 numbers The percentage of sales allocated to the jackpot also increased The remaining prize categories were decreased as a result 17 Matches Avg Prize of 49 Prize Pool Odds per 1 6 of 6 Jackpot 74 17 After Deduction of 3 of 6 Prize 1 6 135 756 5 of 6 Wild Card 20 041 50 4 305 After Deduction of 3 of 6 Prize 1 1 022 626 5 of 6 488 50 4 305 After Deduction of 3 of 6 Prize 1 24 942 10 4 of 6 Wild Card 195 50 4 305 After Deduction of 3 of 6 Prize 1 9 976 84 4 of 6 19 50 8 61 After Deduction of 3 of 6 Prize 1 498 84 3 of 6 Wild Card 7 00 4 305 After Deduction of 3 of 6 Prize 1 374 13 3 of 6 1 00 Fixed 1 28 78 Overall odds 1 in 25 274 The game held its last drawing on September 4 1998 The game along with Keystone Jackpot was replaced with Super 6 Lotto see below for both games Super 7 1986 1995 edit Super 7 a jackpot game similar to keno was originally introduced on August 14 1986 The first draw was on August 20 1986 The original Super 7 was played by selecting 7 of 80 numbers Jackpots started at 2 million and increased in increments of 1 000 000 until it was won each game cost 1 On Wednesday nights the Lottery drew 11 numbers If a player matched 7 of the 11 drawn they won a jackpot that was paid in 26 installments unlike the 2009 2010 revival of Super 7 there was no cash option All prizes were parimutuel The original Super 7 s odds were as follows Matches on Ticket Avg Prize of 49 Prize Pool Odds 7 of 7 Jackpot 70 after deduction of 4 of 7 prize 1 9 626 413 3 6 of 7 4 503 00 10 after deduction of 4 of 7 prize 1 99 652 3 5 of 7 264 50 20 after deduction of 4 of 7 prize 1 2 930 9 4 of 7 7 00 fixed 1 183 7 Overall odds of winning 1 in 172 591 The overall odds when the game first began was 1 in 2 846 367 as the first few drawings did not have a 4 7 prize On April 10 1991 the game s format was changed with 10 numbers drawn instead of 11 and 74 numbers to choose from instead of 80 Players still selected 7 numbers for each game The prize structure from April 10 1991 to game s end was as follows 18 Matches on Ticket Avg Prize of 49 Prize Pool Odds 7 of 7 Jackpot 70 1 14 996 492 2 6 of 7 2 479 00 25 after deduction of jackpot amp 4 of 7 prize 1 133 897 3 5 of 7 196 50 75 after deduction of jackpot amp 4 of 7 prize 1 3 542 3 4 of 7 15 00 fixed 1 205 7 Overall odds of winning 1 in 194 108 On July 10 1993 drawings were moved from Wednesdays to Saturdays The Lottery held the last drawing of the original Super 7 on October 28 1995 This game was replaced by Keystone Jackpot see below for information on that game Saturday Million Dollar Spin 1987 1998 edit The original Saturday Spin was weekly beginning on March 7 1987 Each week five players who had won a free ticket prize had their names on a special wheel the player whose name the wheel stopped on would win 50 000 or 100 000 in cash or a 1 million annuity The other 4 finalists left the weekly drawing empty handed On May 5 1990 Saturday Spin was changed to Million Dollar Spin In the second version of the game 10 players who had won a free ticket prize were selected for the weekly drawing and a second wheel selected a prize of 50 000 75 000 or 100 000 cash or a 1 000 000 annuity Each of the other nine finalists received 5 000 Million Dollar Spin was played until December 26 1998 On the final drawing all prize values were doubled Hearts amp Diamonds edit Hearts amp Diamonds began on October 5 1994 The game involved selecting 5 of 26 playing cards from the hearts and diamonds suits only hence the name This is the only Pennsylvania Lottery game to date including raffles where all ticket selections were by quick pick The game was also Pennsylvania s first to be drawn by random number generator computer as opposed to mechanical ball machine s this method would later be employed to draw Midday games The prize structure was 19 Matches Avg Prize of Sales Odds 5 of 5 20 062 50 30 5 1 65 780 4 of 5 72 00 11 5 1 626 5 3 of 5 2 50 8 0 1 31 3 Overall odds 1 in 29 819 Hearts amp Diamonds ended on March 10 1996 Keystone Jackpot edit Keystone Jackpot began on October 29 1995 replacing the original Super 7 Keystone Jackpot was the first single state game in the U S to draw from two number pools it also is the only U S game to date using two number pools drawing a total of seven numbers Keystone Jackpot was played by selecting 6 of 33 numbers in the first pool and a seventh blue Key Ball from another field of 33 To win players needed to match 4 or more white ball numbers drawn with or without the key ball number or as in Mega Millions or Powerball automatically winning by matching the Key Ball with 3 2 1 or 0 white balls drawn Jackpots were paid in 26 installments there was never a cash option although Pennsylvania s first cash option began during Keystone Jackpot s run Games cost 1 each The prize structure went as follows 20 Matches Avg Prize of Sales Odds 6 Key Ball Jackpot 29 3412 1 36 549 744 6 77 793 50 6 811 1 1 142 179 5 5 Key Ball 7 771 50 3 4447 1 225 615 7 5 77 00 1 0927 1 7 050 5 4 Key Ball 77 00 1 1074 1 6 942 0 4 7 00 3 2291 1 216 9 3 Key Ball 7 00 1 1221 1 624 8 2 Key Ball 1 00 1 47 1 138 8 1 Key Ball 1 00 2 7 1 75 5 Key Ball only 1 00 1 65 1 123 5 Overall odds 1 in 28 526 Keystone Jackpot underwent no changes during its history its final drawing was held September 5 1998 being replaced by Super 6 Super 6 edit Super 6 began on September 5 1998 replacing Wild Card Lotto and Keystone Jackpot Super 6 was one of the first jackpot games in North America where players received automatic Quick Picks instead of being allowed to choose all of their numbers Players selected 6 numbers from 1 through 69 in each game panel receiving two free plays of automatic Quick Picks for a total of 3 plays for 1 Matching all 6 numbers in a game won a jackpot paid either in 26 installments or if selected when playing in a lump sum Players won by matching at least 3 numbers in a game panel The prize pool was arranged as follows 21 Matches Avg Prize of Sales Odds 1 play 6 of 6 Jackpot 39 52 1 39 959 157 33 5 of 6 4 397 50 4 16 1 105 712 06 4 of 6 53 00 3 90 1 1 364 03 3 of 6 2 00 4 42 1 50 31 Overall odds 1 in 48 5 Overall odds 1 in 48 5Its drawings were initially held on Wednesdays and Saturdays later moving to Tuesdays and Fridays shortly after Pennsylvania joined the multi state Powerball game in 2002 Super 6 s final drawing was on January 27 2004 It was replaced by the current game Match 6 Lotto Lucky for Life edit Lucky for Life the PA lottery version began on September 28 2004 22 its first drawing was held on September 30 Lucky for Life was played by picking 6 of 38 numbers each game cost 2 Players won by matching 3 or more numbers and or the game s instant win feature Matching all 6 numbers won an annuity prize of 3 000 per month with a 1 million guarantee There was no cash option which may have led to the game being retired within three years The prize structure was as follows Matches Prize Odds 6 of 6 3 000 month 1 2 760 681 5 of 6 2 000 1 14 378 5 4 of 6 40 1 371 1 3 of 6 3 1 27 8 Overall odds 1 in 25 841 Instant win 10 1 20 0 Overall odds with Instant Win 1 in 11 5 The game s drawings were held on Mondays and Thursdays The game ended on January 22 2007 replaced with Mix amp Match which lasted until May 31 2010 Despite Lucky for Life not related to the current multi state game of that name not being a total success Pennsylvania joined the multi state Cash4Life on April 7 2015 Unlike the Pennsylvania LFL Cash4Life has two lifetime prize tiers winners of either can choose the lifetime annuity or the cash option Super 7 2009 2010 edit Super 7 was re introduced on March 11 2009 the first drawing of the Super 7 revival was two nights later It was a revival of the game of the same name which ran from 1986 to 1995 This version of Super 7 was played by selecting seven numbers from a field of 77 with each selection costing 2 Every Tuesday and Friday night during the live evening televised drawings at 6 59 p m ET the Lottery drew 11 numbers from 77 numbered balls If all 7 numbers on a player s ticket matched any 7 of the 11 balls drawn the player won a jackpot that is paid either in 30 annual installments or in lump sum depending on the player s choice Unlike in Mega Millions or Powerball where the jackpot choice is made after winning Super 7 players were required to make the choice when playing the payment option could not be changed after winning Except for the 2 fifth prize all payouts were parimutuel The prize structure was as follows Numbers matched Probability Payout Average prize if known 7 of 11 1 7 287 298 Varies 48 16 after deduction of fifth level 2 prizes divided among all 7 of 11 winners 6 of 11 1 78 866 9 Varies 13 42 after deduction of fifth level 2 prizes divided among all 6 of 11 winners 10 000 5 of 11 1 2 426 7 Varies 21 81 after deduction of fifth level 2 prizes divided among all 5 of 11 winners 500 4 of 11 1 159 3 Varies 16 61 after deduction of fifth level 2 prizes divided among all 4 of 11 winners 25 3 of 11 1 20 2 Fixed at 2 Overall odds of winning 1 in 17 81 The payout percentage in Super 7 is 52 19 the original Super 7 s payout percentage was 49 On April 13 2010 the Pennsylvania Lottery announced that the revival of Super 7 which had begun just over a year earlier would hold its final drawing on April 27 2010 The Lottery cited the addition of Mega Millions to its portfolio early in the year Super 7 was drawn on Tuesday and Friday nights the same as Mega Millions The jackpot was not won the final drawing the jackpot rolled down to those matching at least 4 numbers those matching 3 numbers won 2 Super 7 was not replaced although about a month later an updated version of Match 6 replaced Mix amp Match Mix amp Match edit Mix amp Match involved selecting five numbers from 1 through 19 as well as the order in which they will be drawn There were two ways to win A for matching three or more numbers in any order mixing and B for matching at least one number in its correct position matching The jackpot started at 50 000 lump sum and was won by matching all five numbers in the order in which they were drawn Games cost 2 each Mix amp Match was drawn during the live nighttime televised drawings at 6 58 50 p m ET Mondays and Thursdays 23 Numbers matched in exact order Match Probability Payout 5 of 5 1 1 395 360 Jackpot 4 of 5 1 19 934 1 000 3 of 5 1 661 3 100 2 of 5 1 22 75 4 1 of 5 1 4 77 Free Ticket Numbers matched in any order Mix Probability Payout 5 of 5 1 11 268 2 000 4 of 5 1 166 20 3 of 5 1 12 8 2 Overall odds of winning were 1 in 3 57 The Lottery had planned to retire Mix amp Match on November 3 2009 replacing it with a new game Double Play These plans were put on hold by Lottery officials the previous month and Double Play ultimately never materialized Mix amp Match did eventually end however It held its final drawing on May 31 2010 and was replaced by a revival of Match 6 Monopoly Millionaires Club edit Main article Monopoly Millionaires Club Pennsylvania was among 23 jurisdictions participating in the launch of the Monopoly Millionaires Club MMC multistate drawing game on October 19 2014 The game was drawn Fridays beginning October 24 With the December 12 drawing Texas suspended sales of MMC tickets the 22 other MMC members participated in two more drawings A game show featuring MMC players had episodes taped they aired beginning March 28 2015 Pennsylvania s MMC payouts for the final drawing were pari mutuel and were much higher than the fixed payouts for each prize tier In late March 2015 MMC returned as a scratch off game as of April 6 there were nine lotteries offering it Pennsylvania had committed to offering the 5 instant game as with the draw game players of the MMC scratch ticket could win a trip for two to Las Vegas to participate in a taping of the MMC television game show which was hosted by Mike amp Molly s Billy Gardell a native of Pittsburgh The MMC scratch game which varied by state and TV game show were discontinued in 2016 Instant games editBesides offering terminal based games the Pennsylvania Lottery has many instant games such tickets are usually referred to as scratch off tickets Approximately 42 of Lottery proceeds are from instant ticket sales The Lottery website maintains an updated list 1 The Pennsylvania Lottery uses an animatronic groundhog called Gus who claims that he is the second most famous groundhog in Pennsylvania after Punxsutawney Phil as the mascot for instant games in television commercials which appear around the beginning of every month 24 Pennsylvania instant games range in price from 1 to 50 Typically higher priced tickets offer better odds of winning higher top prizes up to 1 million for a 20 game 2 500 000 cash or a 3 million annuity for a 25 game 3 million cash for a 30 game and 5 million cash for a 50 game and a higher payout percentage Payouts range from 57 of sales 1 tickets to 76 94 30 tickets to over 80 50 tickets Originally a winning ticket was denoted by two matching letters in the play area Later this was updated to the winning amount being highlighted with parentheses at the top or bottom of the play area in order but not necessarily consecutively for example a 100 winner would be denoted 1 0 0 Still later three letters were scattered around the play area spelling out the winning amount for example a prize of 100 is denoted H U N losing tickets are denoted with a combination of B J K P Q and Z Any prize over 2 500 on newer tickets is denoted with the letters C L M for claim tickets released prior to July 2008 used C L M for amounts over 500 Starting with tickets released at the end of November 2010 tickets no longer have validation codes an area marked Scratch to Cash must be scratched off by the player revealing a bar code Concurrent with the removal of validation codes the Pennsylvania lottery also removed benday a random pattern of squiggly lines used as a security feature citation needed Fast Play editOn February 28 2017 the Pennsylvania Lottery began offering Fast Play games 25 A Fast Play game is printed from a lottery terminal however it is played in a similar manner to the instant games Typically the player must match one or more numbers or symbols to the designated winning symbols in order to win Currently Fast Play games are offered at price points of 1 2 3 5 10 20 and 30 Certain Fast Play games may offer a progressive jackpot which increases with each ticket sold until a jackpot winning ticket is generated at which point the jackpot resets to a base amount Political impact editA 2016 study of winners of the Pennsylvania Lottery found that its winners had an increased probability of shifting towards the right of the political spectrum The largest effect was found among winners who were not yet registered to vote Upon registering they were 9 6 more likely to register as Republicans than non winners This suggests that positive economic shocks have a greater political impact on individuals who are not typically involved in politics or have indistinct political allegiances 26 Lottery offices editThe Pennsylvania Lottery maintains seven lottery offices including its headquarters Area 1 Philadelphia Area 2 Wilkes Barre Area 3 Middletown headquarters Area 4 Clearfield Area 5 Pittsburgh Area 6 Erie Area 7 BethlehemClaiming a winning ticket editPennsylvania Lottery retailers can pay prizes up to 2 500 Until June 30 2008 the maximum on such tickets was 500 Claiming a prize of 600 or more requires filling out a standard claim form and sending it to Lottery headquarters For instant games that make annuity payments as well as the top prizes in Cash 5 etc a claim should be filed at an area lottery office For Mega Millionaire or Powerball jackpots or either life prize in Cash4Life a claim must be filed at Lottery headquarters Winnings and taxes editWhen filing a standard claim form the claimant the retailer and the Pennsylvania Lottery each receive a copy the form is triplicate The Lottery then reports all winnings to the IRS For federal income tax purposes any lottery winnings over 2 500 in a fiscal year are taxable However when the winning amount is greater than 5 000 the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue withholds the proper amount of federal income tax before a check is mailed to the claimant Pennsylvania Lottery winnings by Pennsylvania residents are exempt from state tax however winnings may be subject to local taxes for residents of some municipalities e g Philadelphia 27 Triple Six Fix of 1980 editMain article 1980 Pennsylvania Lottery scandal The host of the Pennsylvania Lottery drawings Nick Perry and seven others participated in a plot to rig The Daily Number colloquially known as the Triple Six Fix On the night of April 24 1980 the number 666 was drawn of the then record 3 5 million payout 1 8 million was paid to those that were in on the fix Lottery authorities became suspicious after rumors began that the drawing was fixed Ticket sales showed a heavy bias towards combinations of only 4s and 6s in that drawing Perry in conjunction with Peter and Jack Maragos Jerry Hammer and five other men either were convicted or entered plea bargains for their involvement Game show editTo celebrate the Lottery s 25th anniversary in 1997 Jonathan Goodson who at the time produced several other lottery game shows produced a Pennsylvania Lottery game show with a format similar to Illinois Instant Riches The show was hosted by former American Bandstand and later several incarnations of the Pyramid game show series Dick Clark assisted by Gigi Gordon Players won up to 365 000 on the show two of its games were Vortex and Freefall both from Illinois Instant Riches though Vortex debuted on Bonus Bonanza in Massachusetts The special show aired on Harrisburg WGAL Philadelphia WPVI Pittsburgh KDKADrawings editAll Pennsylvania Lottery drawings are supervised by Harrisburg based Zelenkofske Axelrod Previous auditors of the drawings include the firms KPMG Hernwick Boyer amp Ritter Wooton amp Kneisley the Huber Group and Akryoyd and Associates Each drawing features a senior citizen witness aged 55 and older 28 From March 2020 to June 2021 and again from August 2021 to March 2022 due to the COVID 19 Pandemic the senior citizen witnesses were replaced by members of the television station The drawings last 90 seconds on weekdays two minutes on Saturdays and one minute on Sundays The mid day drawing lasts 45 seconds Like most US lotteries the Pennsylvania Lottery broadcasts drawings on a network of broadcast television stations WTAJ TV Altoona WPXI Pittsburgh WGAL Lancaster WJET TV Erie WTXF TV Philadelphia and WNEP TV Scranton 29 Portions of the Commonwealth particularly in the Northern Tier are unable to see the drawings because they are served by television markets in New York e g the Bradford region which has some stations from Erie but not WJET Regions such as these can see the Mega Millions and Powerball drawings on the national cable and satellite feed of WGN America Pennsylvania s midday drawings are only viewable online Because New Jersey does not have a station that airs Mega Millions nor Powerball drawings WTXF TV airs the aforementioned drawings for Central and Southern New Jersey as well See also editGambling Lotteries in the United StatesReferences edit Title 4 The official website for the Pennsylvania General Assembly Retrieved 12 July 2021 Beers Paul B 1 November 2010 Pennsylvania Politics Today and Yesterday The Tolerable Accommodation Penn State Press ISBN 978 0 271 04498 9 Pennsylvania Online Gambling Answers And Analysis Online Poker Report 28 October 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2018 PA Governor Lottery Will Get A Big Boost From Launch Of Online Games Online Poker Report 19 February 2018 Retrieved 27 February 2018 PA Officially Becomes Fourth State To Legalize Online Poker Casinos Online Poker Report 30 October 2017 Retrieved 8 May 2018 PA Lottery Launches Keno Virtual Sports And Online Lottery Games On Way Online Poker Report Online Poker Report 2 May 2018 Retrieved 8 May 2018 PA Lottery Bonus Code August 2018 WINNER To Claim 5 Free Bonus Code PA 16 August 2018 Retrieved 28 August 2018 Seven PA Casinos File Lawsuit Against The iLottery BonusCodePA Bonus Code PA 23 August 2018 Retrieved 28 August 2018 https www palottery state pa us About PA Lottery News Events Media News 2019 November Pennsylvania Lottery Launches Derby Cash Horse Rac aspx https www njlottery com en us drawgames cash4life html tab howToPlay Cash4Life by CASH4LIFE New York Lottery Cash4Life Nylottery ny gov Archived from the original on 25 June 2014 Retrieved 25 June 2014 press release Pennsylvania Lottery Benefits Older Pennsylvanians Every Day www palottery state pa us Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 History of the Pennsylvania Lottery 61 Pa Code 817 98 Determination of prizewinners 61 Pa Code 817 118 Determination of prize winners Pennsylvania Bulletin Doc No 98 265 Pennsylvania Code Pennsylvania Code Pennsylvania Code Pennsylvania Code lottery Pennsylvania Lottery Launches New Online Game Lucky For Life Lotto An Assessment of the Impact of Slots Gaming on Pennsylvania Lottery Pennsylvania General Assembly Legislative Budget and Finance Committee 2008 According to the Pennsylvania Lottery Mix amp Match was designed to bridge the product gap between the Daily Number and Big 4 prizes and the Cash 5 jackpot PA Lottery s advertising agency s web page about Gus Retrieved July 2 2010 Fast Play www palottery state pa us Archived from the original on 2 March 2017 Retrieved 1 March 2017 Margalit Yotam 11 May 2019 Political Responses to Economic Shocks Annual Review of Political Science 22 1 277 295 doi 10 1146 annurev polisci 050517 110713 ISSN 1094 2939 City of Philadelphia Department of Revenue School Income Tax Phila gov Retrieved 14 February 2019 Taxable forms of unearned income include dividends royalties short term rental income cash lottery winnings from the Pennsylvania Lottery and some types of interest Lottery Drawing Procedures PDF Pennsylvania Lottery 10 November 2010 Retrieved 27 December 2023 When and Where Can I See the Live Drawings Pennsylvania Lottery Retrieved 14 July 2015 External links editPennsylvania Lottery Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pennsylvania Lottery amp oldid 1207144186, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.