With participants poised to walk away with a $20 jackpot, the full line-up of numbers for the draw were: 1, 17, 38, 68 and 69, with a Powerball of 18. There was a X2 Power Play in place, meaning that some players had the ability to double their prizes.
According to the lottery website, there were no jackpot winners meaning the next draw on Wednesday June 10 will have a top prize of $22 million ($16.7 million cash).
One ticket sold in Indiana matched five balls, netting the holder $1 million. The prize was doubled because the unidentified person purchased the Power Play option.
The jackpot amount was reset to $20 million ($15.8 million cash) after a player in West Virginia bought a winning ticket worth $136 million in the June 3 draw—the only ticket in the country to match all six numbers. It carried a cash option of $108 million.
According to the Associated Press, it was the first grand-prize Powerball ticket in West Virginia in at least a decade. The winner was not named by the lottery organization.
Powerball costs $2 per play, with participants choosing five white balls with numbers between one and 69, then one number between one and 26 for the red Powerball.
Drawings are held every Wednesday and Saturday at 10:59 p.m. ET, also hosted live on YouTube. The jackpot grows by $20 million incrementally until it is won.
While the majority of winnings are in cash, jackpot winners can choose the money to be given as an annuity or a full cash payment. The annuity option is sent out in 30 graduated payments, which will increase by five percent every time money is deposited.
The Powerball website says the odds of winning a prize are set at 1 in 24.9. But you will have to be lucky to walk away with the jackpot, which has odds of 1 in 292,201,338.
Here are the top five Powerball jackpot prizes of all time:
$1.586 billion (01/13/2016) with tickets in California, Florida and Tennessee
$768.4 million (03/27/2019) with a single ticket sold in Wisconsin
$758.7 million (08/23/2017) with a single ticket sold in Massachusetts
$687.8 million (10/27/2018) tickers in Iowa and New York
$590.5 million (05/18/2013) with a single ticket being sold in Florida