The lottery will keep making annuity payments to winners even after they die
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VERIFY reader Cheri asked, "So what happens if you pass away before the 29 years are up?"
THE QUESTION
Does the lottery stop making annuity payments if a jackpot winner dies before the full prize is paid out?
THE SOURCES
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* Judicial Branch of
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THE ANSWER
No, the lottery does not stop making annuity payments if a jackpot winner dies before the full prize is paid out. The remaining prize money will go to the winner's estate or named beneficiaries.
WHAT WE FOUND
Simply put, a jackpot winner's prize is treated the same way as the rest of their money and property, regardless if the winner collected their prize in a lump sum or as annual payments.
"If a jackpot winner dies before receiving all annual installments, the balance of the prize will be paid to the winner's estate,"
A person's "estate" is the property the person owned when they died, the Judicial Branch of
That means that state law also determines how the winner's prize is transferred to their estate, and what options the winner's heirs have when inheriting that prize.
One such option is that the annual payments will simply continue as before, except they will be redirected to the person's estate or named beneficiaries.
"If a winner dies before receiving all annual payments, payments will continue, as scheduled, to the winner's designated beneficiary or to the winner's estate," says the
But estate tax hits all at once, according to personal finance information site Sapling. Since the winner's entire prize is included in the estate, even if that prize only comes in installments through annual payments, it's possible for the estate tax on the prize winnings to be higher than the total annual payments for a few years.
Because of that, many states give beneficiaries the option to inherit the annual payments as a single lump sum.
"Some lotteries will cash out an annuity prize for an estate, to make it easier for the estate to distribute the inheritance and to pay federal estate taxes when they apply," says Annuity.org, an annuity educational resource for consumers. "In order for the lottery to do this, it has to be allowed in the state where the ticket was purchased."
For example, the
Still, other lotteries make it clear that the choice is up to the estate itself.
"By law, the remaining installment payments become part of the winner's estate in the event his/her death precludes collecting full payment," the state of



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