Pennsylvania Powerball ticket worth $1 million sold at a ShopRite in Northeast Philadelphia
A Pennsylvania Powerball ticket worth $1 million for the Wednesday drawing was sold at a grocery store in Northeast Philadelphia, the Pennsylvania Lottery announced on Thursday.
The winning ticket was sold at the ShopRite of Oxford & Levick on 6301 Oxford Avenue in the Oxford Circle neighborhood.
Pennsylvania Lottery said in the release that the ticket matched five of the five white balls drawn, 15-44-63-66-69, but not the red Powerball 20, to win $1 million.
The ShopRite will receive a $5,000 bonus for selling the winning Powerball ticket.
The Powerball jackpot has an estimated value of $168 million, or $77.1 million in cash for the next drawing on Saturday, April 26, Pennsylvania Lottery said.
The recent Powerball ticket worth $1 million that was sold in Pennsylvania was sold at a Wawa in Woodlyn, Delaware County, in March. The last ShopRite that sold a Powerball ticket worth $1 million in Pennsylvania was in Wissinoming in October 2024.
Earlier this Tuesday, a Pennsylvania Lottery ticket worth $2.2 million was sold at a Sunoco in Pittsburgh.
Last week, a combined $2.8 million in Pennsylvania Lottery tickets were sold in Allegheny and Butler counties. One ticket worth $2,360,000 was sold at a convenience store, Freedom Market, in Cranberry Township, Butler County, last Friday. The other ticket worth $500,000 was sold at a grocery store, Giant Eagle in Bethel Park, Allegheny County.
Pennsylvania Lottery said Powerball winners have one year from the drawing date to claim prizes and winning tickets bought at a Lottery retailer should immediately be signed on the back.