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When Is The Powerball Drawing In Ohio

Winning Numbers

Saturday, November 6, 2021

14x Rollover

  • 8
  • 30
  • 48
  • 57
  • 64
  • 9
  • 2

The latest Ohio Powerball draw took place on Saturday November 6th 2021, offering a jackpot worth $143.7 Million . See the winning numbers from the draw, including which Power Play was selected, right here.

All States Total Winners

635,663

Next Estimated Jackpot

$151 Million

Interesting Fact

Prizes

The total prize fund paid out to Ohio winners from Saturday's Powerball drawing was $95,870. However, in the past five draws the state has had an average prize fund of $90,580 per draw, which means the fund for the latest one was about 5.84% higher than average.

Match OH Winners Prize Per Winner OH Prize Fund
5 + PB 0 $143,700,000 No Winners
5 0 $1,000,000 No Winners
4 + PB 0 $50,000 No Winners
4 8 $100 $800
3 + PB 14 $100 $1,400
3 449 $7 $3,143
2 + PB 383 $7 $2,681
1 + PB 3,218 $4 $12,872
0 + PB 8,054 $4 $32,216
5 (Power Play) 0 $2,000,000 No Winners
4 + PB (Power Play) 0 $100,000 No Winners
4 (Power Play) 5 $200 $1,000
3 + PB (Power Play) 6 $200 $1,200
3 (Power Play) 173 $14 $2,422
2 + PB (Power Play) 148 $14 $2,072
1 + PB (Power Play) 1,240 $8 $9,920
0 + PB (Power Play) 3,268 $8 $26,144
Totals 16,966 - $95,870

Ohio Powerball Rules

You can play Powerball in Ohio in the same way as in any other state: just pick five main numbers between 1 and 69 and a Powerball between 1 and 26. There are, however, some state-specific rules that you should be aware of:

  • You must be at least 18 years of age to play.
  • You can enter up to 10 draws in advance.
  • A state tax of four percent will be taken on any winnings above $5,000, in addition to federal taxes.
  • Ticket sales are suspended at 10:00pm ET on draw days, reopening for the following draw shortly after the winning numbers have been confirmed.

See the How to Play page for more information about entering Powerball draws.

How to Claim Prizes

You can claim prizes of up to $599 by taking your ticket to any licensed lottery retailer.

For prizes of between $600 and $5,000, you must take your ticket to be validated at a retailer, where you will be given a Pay to Bearer ticket and a claim form to fill in. The retailer will then let you know where to find the nearest cashing location, which will either be a Peoples Bank or one of Ohio's seven racinos. You must take the Pay to Bearer ticket, along with the completed claim form and a valid form of photo identification, to one of the cashing locations to be paid out. Note that some banks charge a fee for this service.

Alternatively, you can claim prizes of this value by mail but you must still obtain a Pay to Bearer receipt from a retailer. Once you have that, send it along with the winning ticket and a completed claim form to the address below. Prizes can take up to 30 days to process and the money will be issued to you via check.

The Ohio Lottery – Room 452
615 West Superior Avenue
Cleveland, OH 44113-1879

If you win more than $5,000, you will need to contact one of the regional offices below to arrange to claim your prize in person.

Location Address Telephone Number:
Cleveland 1100 Resource Drive Suite 5,
Brooklyn Hts, Ohio 44131
(216) 774-5671
Toledo 315 Arco Drive,
Toledo, Ohio 43607
1-800-5899-6442
Dayton 7462 Webster Street,
Dayton, Ohio 45414
1-800-589-6463
Cincinnati 10840 Kenwood Rd,
Cincinnati, Ohio 45242
1-800-589-9882
Columbus 780 Morrison Road,
Columbus, Ohio 43230-6642
1-800-589-6445
Athens 190 West Union Street, Suite 101,
Athens, Ohio 45701
1-800-589-6466
Akron 5926 Mayfair Road,
North Canton, Ohio 44720
1-800-589-6467
Youngstown 242 Federal Plaza West,
Youngstown, Ohio 44503
1-800-589-6468
Lorain 300 West Erie Broadway,
Lorain, Ohio 44052
1-800-589-6469

Claim Period

You have 180 days from the date of the winning draw to claim a prize. Any money left unclaimed after this period will be transferred to the lottery's education fund.

Lost and Damaged Tickets

The Ohio Lottery states that it is not responsible for lost or stolen tickets. In the event that your ticket does go missing, contact the Ohio Lottery for advice, although please note that it is not under any obligation to pay out any prizes if a winning ticket cannot be produced.

Going Public

Ohio is one of the few states that allows lottery winners to retain their anonymity, and two of the three jackpots won in the state have been claimed by anonymous players. When claiming a large prize from the Ohio Lottery, your name, image, or likeness will not be used for commercial purposes unless you give your written consent.

Where Does the Money Go?

Revenue from the sale of lottery tickets in Ohio is used to support elementary, secondary, vocational, and special education in the state. The lottery has paid over $8 billion to support such causes over the last decade, with more than half of those proceeds coming from the sale of instant games. Powerball has generated around $400 million for education over that period.

Roughly 30 percent of the lottery's revenue goes towards education, with a further 60 percent used to pay out prizes. The remaining 10 percent is split between operating expenses, game costs, and paying bonuses and commissions.

Aread of Spending Percentage of Revenue
Prizes 60%
Payments to Education 30%
Bonuses and Commissions 5%
Operating Expenses 3%
Game Costs 2%

Ohio Powerball Winners

The early days of Powerball in the Buckeye State were exciting, as the biggest jackpot in its history was won just two months after tickets went on sale in April 2010, when a single anonymous ticket holder landed $261 million on June 2nd 2010. The winning ticket was bought at the family-run Hub Carry Out & Deli in Sunbury, and the store's owner Ralph Smith claimed that the winner was a regular patron, although he declined to comment further at the time.

The state's second ever Powerball jackpot arrived just three weeks later, in the drawing on June 23rd. A group of 14 workers at a Chrysler paint shop in Detroit, Michigan, won one half of a $96 million jackpot. The winning ticket was bought from Shirley's Carryout in Curtice, Ohio, by William Shanteau, a local resident and the only member of the group who lived in the state. The group chose the cash option of around $25 million, which gave them around $1.2 million each. It was not Shanteau's first big win, either; he claimed a $100,000 prize around six years previously.

Since that lucky start to Powerball, only one more jackpot has been claimed in Ohio. That one arrived in July 2014, when another anonymous player matched all six numbers with a ticket bought at True North on State Street in Conneaut.

When Is The Powerball Drawing In Ohio

Source: https://www.powerball.net/ohio/numbers

Posted by: lomaxpoccour.blogspot.com

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