• Lottery players everywhere dream of striking a multi-million-dollar jackpot with a winning ticket.
  • But there’s a dark side to coming into a windfall of sudden wealth if you’re not careful.
  • Here’s what it’s really like to win the lottery.

Becoming substantially wealthier thanks to a tiny piece of paper would make your life so much better, right?

In fact, recent research suggests that lottery winners are more satisfied with life than those who lost the lottery and that this happiness is lasting, Business Insider reports.

But winning a lottery jackpot can also have some unwanted side effects.

Here’s what it’s really like to win the lottery.


Lottery players everywhere dream of hitting the jackpot.

Foto: sourcePablo Blazquez Dominguez/Getty Images

The idea of striking rich is enticing enough for the average American to spend $207 a year on lottery tickets.

Foto: sourceCharles Rex Arbogast/AP

Source: CBS News


In reality, though, your chances of actually winning are pretty slim — you have a better chance at getting struck by lightning than you do at winning a Mega Millions or Powerball contest.

Foto: sourceTony Dejak/AP

Source: CBS News and National Geographic


But eventually, someone, or some people, will win.

Foto: sourceJulio Cortez

If the winning numbers are listed on your ticket, your next step is to turn it into the lottery commission.

Foto: sourceSteven Senne/AP

Source: Vice


When people do win, it's understandably a life-changing moment that can cause stress or excitement, which can lead to rash decisions.

Foto: Winners of a Spanish lottery celebrate in 2013.sourcePablo Blazquez Dominguez/Getty Images

Source: Business Insider


But there are a bunch of precautions you should put in place before you even turn your ticket in.

Foto: sourceNam Y. Huh/AP

Source: Vice, Business Insider


Financial adviser Robert Pagliarini told Business Insider that taking "a very deep breath" should be the first step if you win such a high-priced jackpot.

Foto: An English couple celebrate after winning a EuroMillions lottery in 2010.sourceMatt Cardy/Getty Images

Source: Business Insider


Then, hiring an attorney, a tax specialist, and a financial adviser should be your next priority.

Foto: sourceJustin Sullivan/Getty Images

Source: Business Insider


"This financial dream team can help you make smart financial decisions and help you plan for the future," Pagliarini said.

Foto: sourceChris Furlong/Getty Images

Source: Business Insider


They can help you decide if you want to receive payouts over a certain number of years ...

Foto: sourceJosh Reynolds/AP

Source: Forbes


... or collect the prize as a lump sum up front, which is considerably lower than the official jackpot amount.

Foto: sourceLM Otero/AP

Source: Forbes


Another thing to remember is that the jackpot dollar amount and what you will actually pocket are two very different numbers.

Foto: sourceAmy Taxin/AP

Source: Business Insider


When you win a lottery, that prize money is taxed. The US Internal Revenue Service will collect 24% of it.

Foto: sourceWin McNamee/Getty Images

Source: IRS


So if you scored a $900 million Mega Millions jackpot, you'd have to give $216 million to Uncle Sam.

Foto: sourceNam Y. Huh/AP

Source: CBS News


Andrew Jackson Whittaker in West Virginia won a $315 million lottery in 2002, but he actually walked away with $114 million after taxes.

Foto: sourceStuart Ramson/AP

Source: Business Insider


And even when you do win in a draw, sometimes others do as well — meaning you have to split the prize.

Foto: sourceNam Y. Huh/AP

Source: Daily Mail


Just last month, 40 lottery players in New Zealand won a $1 million jackpot, worth $654,000 in the US. But since they were forced to split it 40 ways, each only received $25,000 in New Zealand dollars, equal to $16,360 in the US.

Foto: sourceTony Dejak/AP

Source: Daily Mail


Other winners have landed themselves in hot water for not splitting the jackpot with colleagues or friends that contributed to the winning ticket purchase.

Foto: sourceDamian Dovarganes/AP

Source: Business Insider


A former construction worker, Americo Lopes, cashed in a $38.5 million lottery ticket in New Jersey without telling his coworkers, who had pitched in for the purchase of it.

Foto: Americo Lopes is not featured in the photo above.sourceDamian Dovarganes/AP

Source: Business Insider


They took him to court, where Lopes was ordered to share the prize money with his coworkers.

Foto: Americo Lopes is not featured in the photo above.sourceElise Amendola/AP

Source: Business Insider


Many lottery winners experience what Pagliarini calls "the honeymoon stage of sudden wealth."

Foto: sourceAlberto Saiz/AP

Source: Forbes


He wrote in Forbes that winning such a large sum of money is an unsustainable "high," and that winners should not let the prize money dictate how their lives change.

Foto: sourceKathy Kmonicek/AP

Source: Forbes


Avoiding feeling lost "involves exploring what they want their new lives to look like and creating a strategy that uses the money to help them achieve this," writes Pagliarini.

Foto: sourceJulio Cortez/AP

Source: Forbes


Another thing to be aware of is people taking advantage of you if you win.

Foto: sourceRichard Vogel/AP

Lottery winners have to be prepared for mooching friends in pursuit of benefitting from their new-found wealth.

Foto: sourceBrynn Anderson/AP

Missourian Sandra Hayes split a $224 million Powerball prize with 12 coworkers and soon found that certain acquaintances were more interested in her assets than her friendship.

Foto: Sandra Hayes is not featured in the photo above.sourceCharles Rex Arbogast/AP

Source: Credit Cards


While dining out with her friends, she said they would belatedly announce that they "conveniently" didn't have enough money to foot the bill.

Foto: Sandra Hayes is not featured in the photo above.sourceScott Olson/Getty Images

Source: Credit Cards


"These are people who you've loved deep down, and they're turning into vampires trying to suck the life out of me," Hayes told AP.

Foto: Sandra Hayes is not featured in the photo above.sourcePablo Blazquez Dominguez/Getty Images

Source: Associated Press


Oregon winner Stacey Lowry dealt with a similar issue. She won a $5 million lottery prize but moved towns after she said her entire neighborhood turned against her.

Foto: Above: Lottery winner Stacey Lowry.sourceTLC UK/YouTube


People she trusted began asking for money or gifts, which she refused, and started bashing her name. "The town went crazy," Lowry's friend Melany told TLC. "Lots of rumors."

Foto: Left to right: Melany Collins and Stacey Lowry.sourceTLC UK/YouTube

Your winning might also bring out the worst in family members, too.

Foto: sourcePablo Blazquez Dominguez/Getty Images

When Denise Rossi won a $1.3 million jackpot in 1996 ...

Foto: Neither Denise Rossi nor her husband are featured in the photo above.sourcePablo Blazquez Dominguez/Getty Images

Source: LA Times


... she abruptly decided to divorce her husband without telling him about the prize money in order to keep it all to herself. Her plot backfired three years later, though, when a court ordered her to transfer every penny of her winnings to her ex-husband.

Foto: Neither Denis Rossi nor her husband are featured in the photo above.sourceIan Waldie/Getty Images

Source: LA Times


One Pennsylvania man, William Post, won $16.2 million in 1988 ...

Foto: William Post is not featured in the photo above.sourceScott Olson/Getty Images

Source: Business Insider


... and was pursued by a hit man hired by his brother who hoped to inherit a share of the winnings.

Foto: sourceScott Olson/Getty Images

Source: Business Insider


When people know you have that much money, you're also in greater danger of being robbed.

Foto: sourceScott Olson/Getty Images

Whittaker, the West Virginia lottery winner, was sitting in his car one day when he was robbed of $545,000.

Foto: Above: Andrew Jackson WhittakersourceBob Bird/AP

Source: Business Insider


Winners also have an increased risk of bankruptcy.

Foto: sourceJustin Sullivan/Getty Images

Source: Credit Cards


With such a vast amount of credit available to them, people sometimes opt to make purchases using credit rather than use cash and overspend.

Foto: sourceChristopher Furlong/Getty Images

Source: Credit Cards


Coming into a substantial amount of money also means being thrust into the spotlight — some states require you to publicly announce your winnings.

Foto: sourceMatt Cardy/Getty Images

Source: Readers Digest


You'll never enjoy anonymity again, which is partly why Pagliarini suggests hiring a financial team to help with the flood of media attention.

Foto: sourceEmilio Morenatti/AP

Source: Readers Digest and Business Insider


And in addition to media attention, you'll likely constantly be berated by money request sfrom investors and scammers.

Foto: sourceSpencer Platt/Getty Images

Source: Credit Cards


Whittaker, the winner of the $315 million lottery, spent at least $3 million fighting lawsuits that came out of the woodwork alone, according to ABC News.

Foto: sourceJeff Gentner/AP

Source: ABC News


He told ABC that over 400 legal claims have been made against him since he won the lottery.

Foto: sourceJon C. Hancock/AP

Source: ABC News


And some winners lose big time after hitting the jackpot, even faring worse than they did before.

Foto: sourceDavid Ramos/Getty Images

One winner, Sharon Tirabassi, spent most of her $10 million Canadian jackpot on extravagant homes, cars, designer clothes, parties, vacations, and handouts to family and friends.

Foto: sourceSteve Helber/AP

Source: Business Insider


Within a decade, she was riding the bus again to her part-time job and renting a house.

Foto: Tirabassi is not featured in the photo above.sourceTim Boyle/Newsmakers

Source: Business Insider


A Texas man, Billy Bob, won a $31 million jackpot in 1997.

Foto: sourceTim Boyle/Getty Images

Source: Business Insider


He spent it on finer things, like vacations, homes, and cars, but also obliged too many money requests.

Foto: Billy Bob is not featured in the photo above.sourceMario Tama/Gettty Images

Source: Business Insider


He eventually squandered all of his money away.

Foto: sourceDavid McNew/Getty Images

Source: Business Insider


Another winner, Michael Carroll, won a $15 million British jackpot in 2002 ...

Foto: sourceAlex Brandon

Source: Business Insider


... and lost it all within five years.

Foto: Michael Carroll is not featured in the photo above.sourceOli Scarff/Getty Images

Source: Business Insider


All of which could have been prevented if more sound financial steps were taken.

Foto: sourceOli Scarff/Getty Images