How to Win the Lottery
Published on - August 27th, 2008 (Modified on - December 14th, 2012) (by J.D. Roth)
Ray Otero cannot buy a break. For the past three years, he’s spent $500 to $700 a week playing the lottery, but he’s only won big a few times: $1,000 once and $2,000 twice. Still he keeps playing. He’s sure his luck is bound to change.
Otero’s story, told in a recent New York Times article, is simultaneously funny, poignant, and exasperating. This New York City building superintendent simply wants the “easy life” for his family. He wants to find the money to move back home to Puerto Rico.
So why doesn’t he save the money from working? Because working is for suckers:
Working is for poor uneducated men — a sucker’s game, [Otero] said, where one must run increasingly fast to keep one’s place in line. “You’re making money on the one side and spending it on the other,” he said. “If all you’re doing is working, you’re never going to win.”
And so he’s poured his money into the lottery, looking for his chance to get rich quickly. So far it hasn’t worked. To make matters worse, his friend and neighbor, a doorman named Richie Randazzo, won five million dollars after only spending $30 a week on tickets. “It really isn’t fair,” Mr. Otero said. But what Mr. Otero doesn’t realize is that winning the lottery has nothing to do with luck.
Against all odds
My youngest brother, Tony, used to play the lottery. One day I had to get something out of his car, and I was shocked at the hundreds of scratch-off tickets tucked into every nook and cranny.
“Tony,” I’d said. “Why do you do this? You’re wasting your money.”
“No, I’m not,” he said. “I’ve pretty much broken even on the lottery. I’ve made as much as I’ve spent.”
I knew that this was highly improbable, but didn’t see any sense in arguing. Sure, a newcomer to playing the lottery might be able to claim she’s broken even because she’s only spent about $30 total on it, but has won fifty bucks. But the longer anyone plays, the more likely they are to be a net loser. The longer a person plays, the bigger loser they become.
Just for kicks, I looked through the New York state lottery web site. There are a variety of games offered. None of them have encouraging odds.
- The $1 scratch-off games offer odds of one in five. On average, you’d have to spend $5 to win anything, and even then you’re far more likely to win a buck or two than anything else.
- The more expensive scratch-off games ($5, $10, $20) have better odds (up to one winner in every 3.5 tickets), but more gradual payoffs. That is, it’s more difficult to win a big prize.
- The lottery drawings have even worse odds. The daily Take Five game, for example, has odds of about one in ten. But the base prize is just a free lottery ticket. The odds of winning money are one in 100!
There’s no question: playing the lottery as a strategy to gain money is a fool’s game. Play the lottery for fun if you want, but don’t do it because you think it’s going to help your financial situation. The easiest way to win the lottery is not to play.
A sure thing
If you really want to improve your finances, do something boring with your money. Put it in a savings account. Invest it in the stock market. (Hell, loan it to your brother-in-law. You’re less likely to lose the money with him than with the lottery.)
If you really want to win with your money, take advantage of the extraordinary power of compound interest. If you don’t have a Roth IRA, start one. Use it to buy indexed mutual funds. If that sounds too complicated for you, then open a savings account.
While it’s true that 3% isn’t a huge return on your money, it’s far more than the 80% loss you can expect every time you buy a lottery ticket. (See the comments for a more rigorous mathematical explanation of the actual expected returns.) If Mr. Otero would put $30,000 a year into into a savings account, he’d have about $164,000 after five years. He’d have over $350,000 after ten years. I suspect that’s plenty of money for him to fulfill his dream of moving back to Puerto Rico.
[The New York Times: Thousands later, he sees lottery's cruelty close up, via My Open Wallet — image by midweekpost]
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i buy a lottery ticket every once in awhile. it would of course be nice to win, even if it’s not the biggest jackpot of all time. i can afford to lose a dollar every now and then in the hope that i am buying a ticket that will return more than the cost of buying it.
and a couple words on the merits of saving as a path to millionaire status. as the recent downturn has shown a great number of would-be retirees, savings is not a fool-proof strategy to financial security, especially as time turns against the saver. and it usually isn’t very good on short-term roi either. (and as far as i’m concerned, day trading is just as much of a gambling game as poker.) but really, saving money is also a gamble. buying a cd? that’s a gamble that the interest rate paid on it remains above inflation so that when it reaches maturity, it’s value would not have fallen too much. putting money into a retirement account pre-tax? that’s a gamble on the future tax rate being lower than current one. could go on and on, but pattern is pretty clear: virtually everything monetary is a gamble. now granted, the odds can definitely be vastly more favorable on some items and transactions than on others, but it’s still a gamble.
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I think gambling is immoral and all lottery games should be outlawed period. Some people see it at a tax on imbeciles, but I think it’s legalized extortion of imbeciles. A lot of people become addicted to it & spend a small fortune trying to beat the odds. Yes, there will be a few winners, but 99.9% of people who play the lottery will end up losing. The surest way to make money is to invest it. EZ comes EZ goes.
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My Parents always play the lottery, I’ve just never seen the point.
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I play the lotto on occassion for entertainment only. Hundreds a week can be better spent in savings and bonds. The poor fellow here is the type of idiot that will likely spend his millions as quickly as he has earned them. All because he doesn’t understand how to make his money work for him. If he truely wants to win big and increase his odds, he should find sweeps online that cost nothing except time filling out forms. It isn’t the MM he may be hoping for, but I’ll take a free couple thousand any day.
Just remember to pay the taxes.
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I need to win. Please pray for me to win tonight. Thank you.
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Lottery and its operators are basically the same old good and evil scenarios.
The players are adicts and the operators are like the drug dealers……totally corrupt, and, yes I do play to find the corruption, and yes I’ve made some discoveries using some very powerful computer tools. Dont think they arent dipping into the pot, because they are……..bigtime. OLG operators are lining their pockets with your money.
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You’ve never won- you’re so bitter.
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“playing the lottery as a strategy to gain money is a fool’s game”- I guess I’m a fool then.
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Can people please stop repeating the same ‘tax for dumb people’ line. Is a tax for ignorants we get it!!! Kinda sick of reading over soooo many times. Whatever let people do their thing. If it makes them happy to buy lotto. If you don’t wanna buy it then don’t. I personally never buy it but I think is just as bad to obsess over criticizing the people who do buy it.
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The way you play the lottery is that you should put 3 odds and 3 evens, highs and lows in every game. Don’t play numbers in the same number group, like 10s and 20s. Don’t play like this 7,17,27,37,47. Don’t play the times table, like 2,4,6,8,10. Don’t play birthdays. If you do win,you will win with thousands of others. Every tom, dick and harry is playing birthdays in the lottery. My way,2 lows and 4 highs in every game.
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Here is a happy lottery story: My friends Mom played the same #’s every week for 15 years. $2 a week. She was a 55 yr old waitress, her husband sold insurance, one child (my friend), they owned a house but the neihborhood had gotten bad in the last few years. So one morning she checked the paper before going to work. and said, “John, my #’s came in!” They rechecked, checked the computer, called the lottery office, and They had won $8.6 million dollars! They didn’t tell anyone except their daughter at first, until they had gotten a really good tax lawyer and some good financial advice. When they “came out” they had decided to take 20 yr payments, after taxes, it worked out to be around $250,000 for 20 yrs. (its about 5 million) She “retired herself and her sister that worked with her at the diner.” The other 3 sisters got $10,000. They thru my friend her dream wedding, helped her buy a house. They bought a nice house in a nice neighborhood. Now they aren’t rolling in dough, but they are comfortable and taking the payments was a way to keep the leeches a way. The husband still works but they are in a place where they can now help their daughter and their grandchildren with college. They are very happy and great people too!!
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50 bucks for throwing out a cig? I don’t know where u live, but here it’s 2000 bucks minimum … I don’t play much, but when I do I always win big 200 to 1500, but I don’t do it much … Our lottery funds education from pre k all the way to college .. I think the guy in the story has a gambling problem, but we should point him in the direction of help, not bash the lottery for his problems … PLAY RESPONSIBLY!!!
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But when it comes to intentional influencing of Fortunateness, its much powerless fixed in the minds of people.
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