Would set £10m aside. £11b to charities.
Pretty sure they won't be picking up the winnings.
I think the winners will either have to accept a small percentage (obvs still a pooh tonne of cash) or staggered payments over the next X years.
Would set £10m aside. £11b to charities.
Pretty sure they won't be picking up the winnings.
I think the winners will either have to accept a small percentage (obvs still a pooh tonne of cash) or staggered payments over the next X years.
When you say 'small percentage'......
The $1.28 billion prize is for winners who choose the annuity option, paid annually over 29 years. Most winners opt for the cash option, which for Friday night’s drawing was an estimated $747.2 million (£623.3m).
https://www.itv.com/news/2022-07-30/ticket-holder-wins-nearly-13-billion-in-us-mega-millions
When you say 'small percentage'......
The $1.28 billion prize is for winners who choose the annuity option, paid annually over 29 years. Most winners opt for the cash option, which for Friday night’s drawing was an estimated $747.2 million (£623.3m).
https://www.itv.com/news/2022-07-30/ticket-holder-wins-nearly-13-billion-in-us-mega-millions
When you say 'small percentage'......
The $1.28 billion prize is for winners who choose the annuity option, paid annually over 29 years. Most winners opt for the cash option, which for Friday night’s drawing was an estimated $747.2 million (£623.3m).
https://www.itv.com/news/2022-07-30/ticket-holder-wins-nearly-13-billion-in-us-mega-millions
I know the guy who won the euro million’s 194million
I think lottery winnings in the USA are taxed so he'll have a heck of a tax bill.
Fridays winning ticket came from Illinois. and was the second highest. The highest winner ($1.54B) came from South Carolina a few years ago.If £195 million is a lot for Euromillions, someone in South Carolina has just won $1.34 Billion. That's £1.11 billion english pounds.
Spending a million is easy. £10m buys a decent house. £100m sets up a lot for life and dificult to spend. But £1,110,000,000 takes forever just to count it.
Correct. You would lose approximately another 1/3rd. Thereafter any profit made on investments would be taxed as well.
Well, hey! I've just won £2.70, so sod them!
Yes, huge chunks would go straight to charity - I simply wouldn't be comfortable with that much money. A few millions I could use, sure, but that many? No!How much of £171m would you ultimately keep in the family?
For me, shirley £5m or £10m invested sets several generations fair.
Then huge charitable donations / helping those in real need.
I’ve never heard of mega lottery winners in the UK doing anything like that. I could be wrong. I wonder if an instinct to keep it largely in the family and friends kicks in?
How much of £171m would you ultimately keep in the family?
For me, shirley £5m or £10m invested sets several generations fair.
Then huge charitable donations / helping those in real need.
I’ve never heard of mega lottery winners in the UK doing anything like that. I could be wrong. I wonder if an instinct to keep it largely in the family and friends kicks in?
I didn't realise until recently that if you win and decide to give away money to family and friends, whilst you won't pay taxes on the winnings, they have to pay income tax on the money you give them.
That's not true.
There a potential charge to Inheritance Tax if you cark it within 7 years of the gift, but other than that nothing, nada, bupkiss.