Powerball jackpot at $825M for Saturday: Area stores flooded with customers

Last Powerball winner was Aug. 3.
With the Powerball being over 800 million Bee-Gee's Market in Kettering stayed busy selling tickets Thursday Oct. 27, 2022.   MARSHALL GORBY\STAFF

With the Powerball being over 800 million Bee-Gee's Market in Kettering stayed busy selling tickets Thursday Oct. 27, 2022. MARSHALL GORBY\STAFF

Area retail lottery locations are hopping today and are expected to be on Saturday before the Powerball jackpot drawing, which is estimated at $825 million.

No one has matched all six numbers and won the Powerball jackpot since Aug. 3, allowing the prize to grow to the fifth-largest in U.S. history. That amounts to 36 consecutive drawings without a jackpot winner. The next drawing is Saturday.

Do you want to keep up with Dayton business news?

Our Dayton Business newsletter delivers the latest headlines about local companies, large and small, as well as updates on jobs and economic trends. Sign up to see it in your inbox every weekday.

At Bee-Gee’s Market in Kettering on Friday customers were clamoring to purchase tickets. Jackie Porter, floor manager at the store, told the Dayton Daily News people who don’t gamble or often buy Powerball tickets flood her store when the possible winnings are high.

Porter said her market is known as the “lucky store.”

“We’ve sold several million dollar winners. People drive in from all over the place to buy their tickets here,” Porter said.

Tim Thomas of Springboro was buying his tickets Friday at the Marathon in Springboro.

“You can’t win if you don’t buy a ticket,” Thomas said, who added he would buy each of his family members a new house if he won.

The lack of a winner since August reflects the long odds of winning the grand prize, which are one in 292.2 million.

Haley Secrest, an empolyee of Bee-Gee's Market in Kettering stayed busy selling Powerball tickets Thursday Oct. 27, 2022. MARSHALL GORBY\STAFF

icon to expand image

The new $800 million jackpot amount is for winners who take their winnings through an annuity, paid annually over 29 years. Nearly all winners actually choose the cash option, however, which would be $383.7 million after taxes.

The biggest lottery jackpot to date was a $1.586 billion Powerball prize that three ticket holders won in 2016.

Powerball is played in 45 states, as well as Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.