Powerball Payout Calculator Wyoming
Wyoming takes 0% state tax on lottery winnings โ one of only 11 jurisdictions where the jackpot faces federal tax alone. Wyoming has no state income tax, so lottery winnings face only federal tax. (as of Jan 2026)
Calculate your exact Wyoming payout โExample: what a jackpot is worth in Wyoming
After-tax estimates using 0% 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 | $29,654,043 | $64,321,282 | $992,283 |
| $500M | $148,094,043 | $316,321,282 | $4,785,245 |
| $1B | $296,144,043 | $631,321,282 | $9,526,447 |
How Wyoming 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.
Wyoming lottery tax FAQ
How much tax does Wyoming take from lottery winnings?
Wyoming has no state income tax, so lottery winnings face only federal tax.
What would I actually take home from a $500 million jackpot in Wyoming?
Taking the lump sum (cash value about 47% of the jackpot), you would clear roughly $148,094,043 after federal and state taxes. Taking the 30-year annuity, the after-tax total is roughly $316,321,282, paid in 30 growing installments.
Is the federal tax the same in Wyoming 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 Wyoming tax if I bought the ticket somewhere else?
State withholding follows the state of purchase. If you live in Wyoming but bought the winning ticket in another state, that state withholds first โ Wyoming then taxes you as a resident with a credit for tax paid there (rules vary; confirm with a tax professional).