Yes, but if you take the lump sum and invest it YOURSELF instead of the annuity and letting the lottery do the investing, you can pass it on to your heirs and possibly earn a LOT more if you have a shrewd investor.kbkids said:I knew that but never understood why people would go for the lump sum instead of the annuity. I mean, $800,000 a year income would be more than sufficient for our family!!
Taxes, yes, necessary evil. I wouldn't complain either when I was raking in that much!


dianeschlicht said:Yes, but if you take the lump sum and invest it YOURSELF instead of the annuity and letting the lottery do the investing, you can pass it on to your heirs and possibly earn a LOT more if you have a shrewd investor.

kbkids said:I knew that but never understood why people would go for the lump sum instead of the annuity. I mean, $800,000 a year income would be more than sufficient for our family!!
Taxes, yes, necessary evil. I wouldn't complain either when I was raking in that much!
Hope they all make a wise decision with thier money (AND SHARE IT WITH ME!!!!) 
brerrabbit said:The only problem with that theroy is that the vast majority of lottery winners are not shrewd investors and don't know any they can trust. Once they win people come out of the woodwork and want to help them invest their money but it's no one they can trust. The reality is for a large percentage of lottery winners they are broke within several years of their winnings. Unfortunatly, statistics show that the majority of the people who play the lottery are in the mid to lower income brackets and just don't know how to deal with money so many of them loose it when they take it as a lump sum. I like to think if I won I have the investing savy to make money in the market but even so I would take the payments because if did have a bad year investing I would always know that another payment was coming. People always believe they can beat the market and get returns higher than everybody else but the reality of the market is that thats just not true. I'll take the payments every time, that means no matter what I a least get a super trip to WDW every year for the next 26.
boomhauer said:It's more of a personal gripe with me than anything.
When I lived in the town I grew up in, I never complained about taxes. Roads were taken care of, snow was removed, garbage was removed, etc. I moved to a bigger city about 2 years ago, pay MUCH more in taxes, and they don't do anything. There's 4 pot holes on my street alone, the roads are never plowed, and the main streets are just a disaster.
My wife and I sit there some nights and just wonder - What is our local tax money going to?
's boom. I'd look at movng again. 
Sorry you are wrong on this one. The 365 is the value over the next 20 years if paid out in 20 payments. They chose to take a lump sum. The lump sum is the amount that the lottery would have invested to get the 20 payments. So the government got a few million per person.boomhauer said:I just read this and it makes me sick.
8 people pooled in, won the $365 million jackpot. After taxes, for taking it in a lump sum, they get $15.5 million each. That means, $124 million goes to the winners, and $241 million goes to the government.
I'm sorry - That is absolutely disgusting.
The other looks more impressive!!!!boomhauer said:OK - I see. I didn't realize that. Since everyone almost always takes the cash, why don't they just say $177 million?
But you can invest the money yourself and will more likely make more money.kbkids said:I knew that but never understood why people would go for the lump sum instead of the annuity. I mean, $800,000 a year income would be more than sufficient for our family!!
Taxes, yes, necessary evil. I wouldn't complain either when I was raking in that much!
Yup. Our state's tag line used to be "You can't win if you don't play!" At the end was the blurb: "Gambling problem? Call 1-800-I am a gambling addict" or something like that. Usually spoken so fast you wouldn't catch it.cardaway said:The tax situation sure does sound right, it's always been about the state getting tax money.
Just curious - Do the lottery commercials in other states end with quickly voiced directions to a problem gamblers help line?
It always seemed odd that many states allow lottery gambling but frown on other forms of gambling and other "sin" laws like prostitution.![]()

Tigger_Magic said:Odd? Not really since we have "riverboat casinos" that don't actually go anywhere on the river -- they are permanently locked to the dock.![]()
