Is there a strategy to winning Powerball and Mega Millions? Top tips for picking numbers

In 2016, Nicholas Kapoor, a professor at Fairfield University in Connecticut, bought a lottery ticket to teach his statistics students about mathematical probability.

“I always buy a Powerball ticket to show my students how improbable it is to win,” Kapoor said.

Then something unexpected happened. “I ended up winning,” he said.

Kapoor’s Quick Pick matched four of the five numbers drawn plus the Powerball number. The grand prize was $100,000.

After stowing the winning lottery ticket in a safety deposit box, he made a copy to show the class. It wasn’t exactly the lesson plan he had in mind.

“It is extremely, extremely rare," Kapoor assured his students. "I always say I am a one-off. I am a statistical anomaly.”

Blank forms for the Powerball lottery sit in a bin at a local grocery store in Des Moines, Iowa.
Blank forms for the Powerball lottery sit in a bin at a local grocery store in Des Moines, Iowa.

Becoming a Mega Millions and Powerball prize winner is a long shot

People dream about becoming the lucky ones who put the mega in millions. Massive jackpots – that have only gotten more massive in recent years – feed those fantasies of mind-blowing winnings.

But lottery games are mostly only lucrative for the private companies that states hire to run them, says Lew Lefton, a faculty member with the Georgia Tech School of Mathematics.

“The lottery always makes money. Just like Vegas, the house wins,” Lefton said. “Otherwise it would not be a business.”

In fact it’s even harder to win Mega Millions and Powerball than it used to be because recent rules make the odds even longer so lottery games can sell more tickets, Lefton says.

Lucky numbers, Quick Picks

But that hasn't kept us from trying our luck.

Americans spend more on lottery tickets every year than on cigarettes or smartphones, some $91 billion in 2020 alone, according to historian Jonathan Cohen, author of  “For a Dollar and a Dream: State Lotteries in Modern America.”

The lottery is most popular among those who've been denied economic opportunities and see it as their best shot at the American dream.

"Studies indicate that the players who spend the largest percentage of their income on tickets and who play the most often are disproportionately male, lower income, less educated and non-white," Cohen wrote in the Washington Post.

Does buying more Powerball, Mega Millions tickets work?

Many lottery players hope they can increase their odds by playing lucky numbers such as birthdays and anniversaries, buying tickets every week or only choosing Quick Picks, where lottery machines randomly select a group of numbers.

Magic numbers, hot numbers, cold numbers, significant dates, the odds are still stratospheric that your ticket will be the one to hit the big jackpot, Kapoor says.