Finn's Take· TL;DRSomeone in Arkansas just received the ultimate Christmas gift. A single winning ticket sold at a Murphy USA gas station in Cabot, Arkansas, claimed the $1.817 billion Powerball jackpot drawn on Christmas Eve, marking the second-largest lottery prize in U.S. history . The last time someone won a Powerball jackpot on Christmas Eve was in 2011 , making this victory particularly special for the holiday season.
The small community of Cabot, with roughly 27,000 people located 26 miles northeast of Little Rock , suddenly finds itself at the center of one of the biggest lottery stories ever told. The winning location was closed for Christmas when reporters tried to reach them , adding an air of mystery to the already extraordinary tale.
The winning numbers were 4, 25, 31, 52, and 59, with a Powerball of 19 . This victory came after 47 consecutive drawings without a winner, setting a Powerball record for the most drawings in a single jackpot cycle .
The winner faces a crucial decision: accept the full $1.817 billion paid as an annuity over 30 years, or take a lump-sum payment of $834.9 million before taxes . Most lottery winners choose the lump sum option , despite receiving significantly less than the advertised jackpot amount.
The odds of winning were a staggering 1 in 292.2 million . To put this in perspective, a mathematics professor compared it to "selecting a specific second over a nine-year span, and then attempting to guess that specific second" . Even buying 100 tickets would be "like having just 100 guesses to guess that one second in a nine-year span" .
This marks only the second time Arkansas has produced a Powerball jackpot winner, with the first occurring in 2010 . Under Arkansas state law, the winner can choose to remain anonymous for three years before their name becomes public record, unless they are a public official or related to one .
This jackpot followed 46 consecutive drawings where no one matched all six numbers, with the last winner occurring on September 6 when players in Missouri and Texas shared a $1.787 billion prize . Last-minute ticket sales pushed the final jackpot total even higher than previously expected , demonstrating the frenzy that builds around such massive prizes.
Arkansas had additional winners in this drawing, with a $100,000 ticket sold in Little Rock and a $50,000 ticket sold in Rogers . Large jackpots tend to boost ticket sales significantly, increasing revenue for state lottery funds that support education and other public spending .
The Christmas Eve timing adds a magical element to an already incredible story. While multiple jackpots have been won on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day throughout Powerball's history, none had ever reached $1 billion until now . As the jackpot resets to $20 million for the next drawing, millions of players will undoubtedly be hoping lightning strikes twice – though the odds suggest they'll need their own Christmas miracle.