Business & Tech

$1M Powerball Ticket Sold in Virginia: Check Your Numbers

Jackpot won in New Jersey, but there's enough prize money to go around. Here are Saturday's Powerball numbers.

The Powerball jackpot — all $429.6 million of it — was snagged by one lone ticket in New Jersey. But a Virginia player woke up Sunday morning as the commonwealth's latest millionaire.

Powerball officials have confirmed a $1 million ticket was sold in Virginia. Three other tickets also matched the first five numbers in Saturday night's drawing in California, Illinois and New York.

Other prizes in Virginia: one $100,000 winner and 20 players won $200.

Find out what's happening in Restonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The winning Powerball numbers for May 7, 2016:

  • 05-25-26-44-66, with a Powerball of 09

The $429.6 million winning ticket was sold in Mercer County, N.J., according to New Jersey Lottery officials. The location will not be disclosed until security procedures are completed, likely Monday.

Find out what's happening in Restonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The Powerball jackpot resets to $40 million for the next drawing to be held Wednesday, May 11 at 11 p.m.

In January, the Powerball jackpot climbed to $1.6 billion, the highest it's ever been. Three people from California, Tennessee and Florida ended up cashing in on the jackpot.

So how does Powerball work?

Tickets are sold for $2 in 44 states, including New Jersey, Pennsylvania, plus the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. The jackpot starts at $40 million and increases after each drawing if there isn't a winner.

The record jackpot went from $355 million to $1.6 billion in three drawings.

Players pick five numbers from one to 69 and a sixth Powerball number, one through 26. (Most people just choose to get random numbers.) There are various levels of payouts, but to win the ultimate jackpot, you have to match all five numbers plus the Powerball.

The odds of that happening? Just 1 in 292,201,338. In other words, don't cash out your kids' college fund to buy tickets.

A winner can pick two ways to claim their prize. The first is an annuity that is paid out 30 times over 29 years. The second is an immediate cash payout that is available immediately but is significantly less money than the total jackpot.

Includes reporting by Marc Torrence and Tom Davis

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