The special tax on people who cannot do math is $2. I paid it twice.
$4 against over a billion annuity isn't a bad risk, actually.
The lump sum payout on the estimated $1,400,000,000 is $868,000,000.
That easily pegs the max tax rate, so your take-home is $564,200,000.
I think I can squeak by on that for a year or two. It'd be rough.
Obviously, we're not quitting our day jobs until the number is drawn and we're simultaneously struck by lightning, and bit by a shark while being swept up in a sharkanado.
Plus I really want to win so I can claim I personally paid for almost four F-35s!
$4 against over a billion annuity isn't a bad risk, actually.
The lump sum payout on the estimated $1,400,000,000 is $868,000,000.
That easily pegs the max tax rate, so your take-home is $564,200,000.
I think I can squeak by on that for a year or two. It'd be rough.
Obviously, we're not quitting our day jobs until the number is drawn and we're simultaneously struck by lightning, and bit by a shark while being swept up in a sharkanado.
Plus I really want to win so I can claim I personally paid for almost four F-35s!