Latest Mega Millions draw
Mega Millions uses 5 white balls from 1 to 70 and 1 gold Mega Ball from 1 to 24.
Check the latest Mega Millions draw with the winning white balls and the gold Mega Ball in the same premium layout.
Live backend-ready layout, premium glass look and internal links that match your current page style.
Mega Millions uses 5 white balls from 1 to 70 and 1 gold Mega Ball from 1 to 24.
This page is built to mirror the same premium format as your current lottery pages, but the content is adapted to Mega Millions. It highlights the five white balls and the gold Mega Ball so the visitor instantly understands the latest draw.
It also works as the main hub for internal navigation, linking to ticket checking, prize tiers, odds and historical statistics. That keeps the same premium SEO structure while making the copy fully English.
Yes, it is designed to load the latest draw available in your backend for the megamillions game key.
The page separates the five white balls from the Mega Ball to match the official game format.
Yes. Use the ticket checker linked in the sidebar.
Mega Millions is one of the two largest lottery games in the United States, available in 45 states plus Washington D.C. and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Drawings take place every Tuesday and Friday at 11:00 PM Eastern Time. Results are officially managed by the Mega Millions Consortium and published on Radar Loto shortly after each drawing.
Each Mega Millions drawing produces a combination of 5 white balls drawn from a drum of 70 balls, plus 1 gold Mega Ball drawn from a separate drum of 25 balls. The jackpot, won by matching all 5 white balls plus the Mega Ball, starts at $20 million and grows until someone wins. Mega Millions has produced some of the largest lottery jackpots in US history, including prizes exceeding $1 billion.
The Megaplier option (available for an extra $1 per play) multiplies non-jackpot prizes by 2x, 3x, 4x, or 5x. The $1,000,000 Match 5 prize becomes up to $5,000,000 with Megaplier.
Both games offer enormous jackpots, but there are key differences. Mega Millions uses 70 white balls (vs Powerball's 69) and a 25-ball Mega Ball drum (vs Powerball's 26), making the jackpot odds slightly harder: 1 in 302.5 million vs 1 in 292.2 million. However, Mega Millions historically tends to roll over more often, producing larger jackpots on average. Check our Mega Millions ticket checker or the number generator for more tools.