- Jun 20, 2001
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...would you choose one lump sum or annual payments for 26 years?
If you choose lump sum, you get the cash value of the lottery, which is somewhere around 55%, I think. For example, a $46 million lottery would have a one lump sum value of $26 million. You pay a one time 25% tax on that lump sum value, i.e. you would get $19.5 million.
If you choose annual payments, your first payment is 2.6% of the total amount you won, and increases thereafter by .1% each year until the 26th year, at which point you get the final payment at 5.1% of the total amount. You pay tax annually on the payments you receive.
Edit:
Moved to Off Topic
AnandTech Moderator - RebateMonger
If you choose lump sum, you get the cash value of the lottery, which is somewhere around 55%, I think. For example, a $46 million lottery would have a one lump sum value of $26 million. You pay a one time 25% tax on that lump sum value, i.e. you would get $19.5 million.
If you choose annual payments, your first payment is 2.6% of the total amount you won, and increases thereafter by .1% each year until the 26th year, at which point you get the final payment at 5.1% of the total amount. You pay tax annually on the payments you receive.
Edit:
Moved to Off Topic
AnandTech Moderator - RebateMonger
