Lottery winner rejects 1M lump sums for 1k weekly payment

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A 20-year-old lottery winner shocked everyone by turning down a $1 million lump sum and choosing $1,000 a week for life instead. Brenda said the steady income felt safer and more reliable. Some financial experts pointed out that, depending on how long she lives, she could end up getting way more than a million. Her choice set off a big online debate, with people arguing whether they’d grab the cash upfront or play the long game.
 
Especially with taxes. Also I bet her significant other would never leave her.
That might be a blessing or a curse

Hopefully she able to set boundaries with her family...at her young age that would be my biggest worry if she took the lump sum...the weekly joint reduces some of that pressure but definitely doesn't eliminate it...wish her situation wasn't public knowledge
 
Let me be her man...following her around with an I.V. and Advil! She will sleep in a hyperbaric chamber! Everything going in her will be organic...including my nutt!
 
According to Mark Cuban:
In June, when the Mega Millions jackpot reached $1.1 billion, Benzinga interviewed “Shark Tank” producer and “shark” Mark Cuban about how to handle such a windfall. Cuban, an experienced billionaire, had a lot to say on the matter.

First off, Cuban recommended playing the long game. As Benzinga noted, the Mega Millions winner was slated to receive one of two types of payout: a $1.1 billion annuity providing approximately $23 million per year for 30 years, or a single lump payout of roughly $528.8 million.

Don’t take the lump sum,” Cuban told Benzinga. “You don’t want to blow it all in one spot.”

Cuban also recommended playing it safe with this kind of once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. That extends most crucially to the temptation to invest your massive winnings, which he suggested all lotto winners avoid. Whether you accept the 30-year annuity at $23 million per year, or take the single lump-sum payout, Cuban was insistent that you not risk your lotto money as an investor.

“You don’t become a smart investor when you win the lottery,” he asserted. “Don’t make investments. You can put it in the bank and live comfortably — forever.”

He’s likely right. The odds of hitting a jackpot twice — once as a player and again as an investor — are exceptionally rare. Why risk financial peace of mind on the hope of making another astronomical amount of money?

“You will sleep a lot better knowing you won’t lose the money,” he said.

Since Cuban can’t be with you every step of the way on your newfound billionaire journey, he also recommended that lotto winners immediately hire tax attorneys. Such an attorney can guide you and your winnings through the convoluted series of state and federal tax laws that come with winning a huge sum of money overnight, and keep the IRS at bay."
 
I'd lump sum it; I don't trust in the long term viability of any company.....

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Peep it: Publisher's Clearing House can't pay the people who they promised that they'll get 1k for life.....smdh.
 
If she put the 1 million in just a high yield savings account, she would make 50k a year in interest - AND still have her million dollars in the bank.
gotta remember.............after taxes, that million is around $600k
at least in States where there is no state tax it is.
 
gotta remember.............after taxes, that million is around $600k
at least in States where there is no state tax it is.
Even at $600 she would make 30k a year in interest and still havbe the $600k in the bank. Also, she'll have to pay taxes on the 1k a week she took.

AND in case of any emergency, that 1k a week won't do shit for her.

Having 600k in the bank gives you a solid nest egg in case of any emergency.
 
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