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Why Does Mega Millions Cost $5 Now?

Short answer: Mega Millions costs $5 because the game changed in April 2025. The current version includes a built-in multiplier for eligible non-jackpot prizes, a higher starting jackpot structure, and updated odds. The higher ticket price does not make the game predictable or guarantee a better result for any one player.

What changed in the new Mega Millions game

The current Mega Millions format changed the price from the older $2 base play to a $5 play. Mega Millions says the new game was designed around larger starting jackpots, faster-growing jackpots, improved jackpot odds compared with the prior format, and a built-in multiplier for non-jackpot prizes.

How the built-in multiplier works

Each current Mega Millions play includes a multiplier that can multiply eligible non-jackpot prizes. That means the multiplier is no longer just a separate add-on in the same way many players remember from the old format.

What this means for casual players

The practical choice is budget-first. A $5 Mega Millions play costs more than a $2 Powerball base play, so some players may prefer fewer lines, a different game mix, or simply checking the current jackpot before deciding.

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FAQs

When did Mega Millions become $5?

The current Mega Millions changes launched after the final old-format drawing on April 4, 2025, with the new game beginning in April 2025.

What does the $5 Mega Millions ticket include?

The current $5 Mega Millions play includes a built-in multiplier for eligible non-jackpot prizes.

Did the Mega Millions odds change?

Yes. Under the current format, Mega Millions jackpot odds are 1 in 290,472,336 per play.

Source notes

Last verified: May 20, 2026. Lottery rules, drawing schedules, prices, odds, prize details, and claim rules can change. Always verify game rules and results with official lottery sources before buying a ticket or acting on prize information.