We did the math to see if it's worth it to buy a ticket for the $415 million Powerball jackpot

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A man purchases New York State Lottery tickets for the $400 million Powerball lottery in New York's financial district February 19, 2014. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

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You probably shouldn't do this.

The Powerball lottery drawing for Saturday evening has an estimated jackpot prize of $415 million.

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While that's a huge amount of money, buying a ticket is still probably a losing proposition.

Consider the expected value

When trying to evaluate the outcome of a risky, probabilistic event like the lottery, one of the first things to look at is "expected value." The expected value of a randomly decided process is found by taking all of the possible outcomes of the process, multiplying each outcome by its probability, and adding all of these numbers up. This gives us a long-run average value for our random process.

Expected value is helpful for assessing gambling outcomes. If my expected value for playing the game, based on the cost of playing and the probabilities of winning different prizes, is positive, then in the long run the game will make me money. If expected value is negative, then this game is a net loser for me.

Powerball and similar lotteries are a wonderful example of this kind of random process. As of October 2015 in Powerball, five white balls are drawn from a drum with 69 balls, and one red ball is drawn from a drum with 26 balls. Prizes are then given out based on how many of a player's chosen numbers match the numbers written on the balls. Match all five white balls and the red Powerball, and you win the jackpot. In addition, there are several smaller prizes won for matching some subset of the drawn numbers.

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Powerball's website helpfully provides a list of the odds and prizes for each of the possible outcomes. We can use those probabilities and prize sizes to evaluate the expected value of a $2 Powerball ticket. Take each prize, subtract the price of our ticket, multiply the net return by the probability of winning, and add all those values up to get our expected value:

main powerball odds

Business Insider/Andy Kiersz

Already, we are in trouble. Given the overwhelming likelihood - a 96% probability - that we wind up matching absolutely nothing and therefore wind up just throwing our $2 out the window, our expected value ends up being $0.26 in the red. We would need a prize of around $500 million to get a positive expected value.

Annuity vs. lump sum

Of course, even that scenario with a $500 million prize and a positive expected value is a vast oversimplification. First, the headline $415 million grand prize is paid out as an annuity: Rather than getting the whole amount all at once, you get the $415 million spread out in smaller - but still multimillion-dollar - annual payments over the course of 30 years. If you choose to take the entire cash prize at one time instead, you get much less money up front: The cash payout value at the time of writing is $269.7 million.

Looking at the lump sum, we are doing even worse than with the headline annuity, with an expected value of -$0.76:

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lump sum odds

Business Insider/Andy Kiersz

The question of whether to take the annuity or the cash is somewhat nuanced. Powerball points out on their FAQ site that in the case of the annuity, the state lottery commission invests the cash sum tax-free, and you only pay taxes as you receive your annual payments, whereas with the cash payment, you have to pay the entirety of taxes all at once.

On the other hand, the state is investing the cash somewhat conservatively, in a mix of various US government and agency securities. It's quite possible, although risky, to get a larger return on the cash sum if it's invested wisely. Further, having more money today is frequently better than taking in money over a long period of time, since a larger investment today will accumulate compound interest more quickly than smaller investments made over time. This is referred to as the "time value of money."

Taxes make things much worse

As mentioned above, there's the important caveat of taxes. While state income taxes vary, it's possible that combined state, federal, and in some jurisdictions local taxes could take as much as half of the money. Factoring this in, if we're only taking home half of our potential prizes, we move even more solidly into negative expected-value territory, making our Powerball "investment" a very bad idea:

annuity after tax main

Business Insider/Andy Kiersz

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The hit to halving the cash one-time prize is equally devastating:

lump sum after tax

Business Insider/Andy Kiersz

When you consider the expected value of a Powerball ticket, you can see that the lottery is a pretty bad "investment."

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