Missouri Lottery


The Missouri Lottery is run by the government of Missouri. It is a charter member of the Multi-State Lottery Association, whose first drawing was held in 1988.

History

The Lottery began selling tickets January 20, 1986. An executive director oversees the organization and reports to a five-member commission that is appointed by the governor. May Scheve Reardon took over as Missouri Lottery executive director in December, 2009.
In the beginning, Lottery proceeds were directed to Missouri's General Revenue fund. In 1992, voters approved Amendment 11, which earmarked proceeds for public education. All monies since July 1993 have gone to education programs. Proceeds are appropriated by the Legislature.
The Lottery offers Scratchers tickets, plus the online games Missouri Lotto, Club Keno, Pick 3, Pick 4, Show Me Cash, and Powerball. Powerball's former rival, Mega Millions, came to Missouri on January 31, 2010. The $250,000 Scratcher card generated much publicity when unemployed couple Robert Russell and Tracie Rogers won the jackpot in July 2010.
The Lottery's mission: "The Missouri Lottery generates funds to provide educational opportunities for Missouri students, support Missouri businesses and entertain millions."
The minimum age to purchase a Missouri Lottery ticket is 18.

Lottery games

Current in-house games

Club Keno/Keno To Go

Club Keno has drawings every four minutes. Traditionally sold in age-controlled environments, the game is now available at any Missouri Lottery retailer as Keno To Go. Options and prizes vary.

Scratchers

Scratch cards are the Lottery's most popular games, sold in a large variety of locations from gas stations to sports venues via vending machines. Card prices range from $1 to $30, with the more expensive games having better odds of winning as well as larger prizes. Themed scratchers are common and players are occasionally encouraged to enter specific losing tickets into "second chance" drawings for additional prizes.

Pick 3

Pick 3 is drawn twice daily, seven days a week. Prices, options, and prizes vary.

Pick 4

Pick 4 is almost identical to Pick 3, except that a four-digit number is drawn.

Show Me Cash

Show Me Cash is played daily, drawing five numbers from 1 through 39. Games cost $1 each. Jackpots begin at $50,000, increasing by at least $5,000 until there is a game matching all five numbers.

Missouri Lotto

Missouri Lotto is drawn Wednesdays and Saturdays. Six numbers from 1 through 44 are chosen. Players get two games for each $1 wager The progressive jackpot begins at $1,000,000 ; players win cash by matching at least four of the six numbers in any game. A free $1 play is won by matching three numbers. The game's monetary prizes are paid on a pari-mutuel basis.
Beginning November 4, 2012, randomly selected Missouri Lotto tickets are printed with the word "Doubler". Any money prize won on a Doubler ticket wins twice the normal amount; a three-number match wins a $2 free play

Multi-jurisdictional games

Lucky for Life

In 2009, Connecticut launched a game called Lucky-4-Life. Three years later it became a regional game, taking on the current name.
The current format began in January 2015. As of April 2017, Lucky for Life is available in 22 states and the District of Columbia Games are $2 each.

Mega Millions

On October 13, 2009, the Mega Millions consortium and MUSL reached an agreement to cross-sell Mega Millions and Powerball. Missouri joined Mega Millions on January 31, 2010, the cross-sell expansion date.
Mega Millions is drawn Tuesdays and Fridays. Players choose five white balls numbered 1 through 75, and a gold-colored "Mega Ball" numbered 1 through 15. Games are $1 each, or $2 if the Megaplier is chosen. Jackpots begin at $15 million, payable in 30 graduated yearly installments unless the cash option is chosen.

Powerball

Powerball began in 1992. Its jackpots begin $40 million, with drawings on Wednesday and Saturday nights.

Former games

Fun & Fortune

For several years in the 1990s, the Lottery aired a television game show called Fun & Fortune, hosted by Rick Tamblyn.