Powerball Payout Calculator Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania taxes lottery winnings at 3.07% on top of federal tax. Pennsylvania's flat 3.07% income tax is withheld from lottery prizes over $5,000. (as of Jan 2026)
Calculate your exact Pennsylvania payout โExample: what a jackpot is worth in Pennsylvania
After-tax estimates using 3.07% state tax, the 2026 federal brackets (24% withheld up front, 37% top rate), and a lump sum cash value of 47% of the advertised jackpot.
| Advertised jackpot | Lump sum net | Annuity net (30-yr total) | First annuity payment (net) |
|---|---|---|---|
| $100M | $28,211,143 | $61,251,282 | $946,075 |
| $500M | $140,879,543 | $300,971,282 | $4,554,205 |
| $1B | $281,715,043 | $600,621,282 | $9,064,368 |
How Pennsylvania compares
Eleven jurisdictions take no state tax on lottery wins (including Texas, Florida, and California). Among states that do tax, rates run from 2.5% (North Dakota, Arizona) to 10.9% (New York). See the full 51-state comparison table or read lump sum vs annuity: which to take.
Pennsylvania lottery tax FAQ
How much tax does Pennsylvania take from lottery winnings?
Pennsylvania's flat 3.07% income tax is withheld from lottery prizes over $5,000.
What would I actually take home from a $500 million jackpot in Pennsylvania?
Taking the lump sum (cash value about 47% of the jackpot), you would clear roughly $140,879,543 after federal and state taxes. Taking the 30-year annuity, the after-tax total is roughly $300,971,282, paid in 30 growing installments.
Is the federal tax the same in Pennsylvania as everywhere else?
Yes. Federal treatment is identical nationwide: 24% is withheld on prizes over $5,000, and jackpot-size winnings reach the 37% top bracket (income above $640,600 for a single filer in 2026), so the remainder is due when you file.
Do I pay Pennsylvania tax if I bought the ticket somewhere else?
State withholding follows the state of purchase. If you live in Pennsylvania but bought the winning ticket in another state, that state withholds first โ Pennsylvania then taxes you as a resident with a credit for tax paid there (rules vary; confirm with a tax professional).