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originally posted by: PorkChop96
a reply to: AlienBorg
The following screenshot is from YOUR link. Notice how the final number after taxes equals out to about 35% of the original number? Well OMG, that would mean the total tax/fee rate is about 65%.
Not sure how many other ways I can lay this out for you to understand?
And regardless of the taxes and fees, the lottery is not meant to be a charity. Not everyone is going to win, that's how it works. If you don't like it, you don't have to play it.
If the $707.9 million cash option was taken, the winner would pay $261.9 million in federal taxes and take home $446 million
Regardless of which option the player takes, the IRS takes a minimum 24% federal withholding tax upfront on lottery winnings. That's a big chunk out of either payment choice. If the total $1.35 billion payout is chosen:
Federal taxes: $324 million
Take-home: $1.026 billion (by 2051)
In practice, there is a 24 percent federal withholding of the gross prize, plus the remaining tax, based on your filing status. For example, if your gross prize is $1,000,000, you need to pay $334,072 in total taxes ($240,000 federal withholding, plus the remaining $94,072 for single filing status in 2021).
originally posted by: PorkChop96
a reply to: AlienBorg
I give you numbers from your source and you're still arguing?
No matter the size of the prize, if you take the lump sum (95% of people do), 40-50% of the gross is taken immediately before taxes are even taken out. That figure is given to the state the winning ticket was sold in.
The lump sum percentage you get and then taxes till take affect on a smaller prize......smh
Not sure why you are fighting so hard to prove math wrong that has been laid out and proven BY YOUR SOURCE. If you want to be obtuse on the matter that is up to you.
I will say this one more time; The lottery is not a charity so that everyone can win. It is an odds game that you play to have a chance at winning. If someone wants something where everyone wins, go play youth soccer and get a participation trophy. And if you don't like how the game is played, don't play it. Simple as that
If the $707.9 million cash option was taken, the winner would pay $261.9 million in federal taxes and take home $446 million
Regardless of which option the player takes, the IRS takes a minimum 24% federal withholding tax upfront on lottery winnings. That's a big chunk out of either payment choice. If the total $1.35 billion payout is chosen:
Federal taxes: $324 million
Take-home: $1.026 billion (by 2051)
originally posted by: PorkChop96
a reply to: AlienBorg
The numbers I gave, that are correct, apply to the lump sum, which is exactly what we were discussing. Not the installments that only 5% of winners choose.
The diagram speaks for itself and even proves my math correct, give or take a few percentage. There is no misinterpreting a picture that displays the actual payouts.
Even if you take the payments, you're still being taxed over 50% of the gross jackpot.
But I can tell I am only wasting my time trying to explain this the simplest way I possibly can, so I will just excuse myself from this thread.