On the evening of February 4, 2026, hopeful lottery players across the United States tuned in for the latest round of draw games, each one clinging to dreams of instant fortune. The night’s most anticipated event was the Powerball drawing, a game that, over the years, has transformed ordinary people into overnight millionaires. As the numbered balls tumbled and the results were revealed, the suspense was palpable from Florida to Minnesota, Nebraska to Washington, D.C.
According to USA TODAY, the winning Powerball numbers for February 4 were 27, 29, 30, 37, and 58, with the Powerball number 15 and a Power Play multiplier of 2. This combination was echoed in state lottery reports from Florida, Minnesota, Nebraska, and the District of Columbia, confirming the draw’s consistency nationwide. The Powerball Double Play numbers, offering a second shot at a hefty prize, came up as 10, 43, 49, 54, and 55, with Powerball number 10.
The stakes were high—Midwest Connect Gannett reported the jackpot for that Wednesday night’s Powerball was an estimated $80 million, with a cash option of $36.2 million. While the results were in, confirmation of a jackpot winner was still pending at press time, leaving players on edge and fueling the familiar post-draw speculation. Powerball drawings, as many seasoned players know, are held every Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday at approximately 10:59 p.m. Eastern Time, making each midweek and weekend evening a potential turning point in someone’s life.
But Powerball was far from the only game in town. The Florida Lottery, for instance, offered a full slate of draws on February 4. Alongside the national Powerball, Floridians could try their luck at the Florida Lotto (with winning numbers 09, 16, 21, 43, 48, 50) and the Lotto Double Play (14, 19, 35, 42, 47, 53). The Cash4Life game, another multi-state favorite, produced winning numbers 03, 09, 25, 26, 31 with a Cash Ball of 01. For those who prefer shorter odds and more frequent draws, Fantasy 5 and Cash Pop provided multiple chances throughout the day, with Fantasy 5’s midday numbers coming in at 01, 08, 15, 23, 32, and evening numbers at 04, 06, 12, 15, 16.
The story was similar in Nebraska, where residents eagerly checked their tickets for Pick 3 (2, 6, 9), Pick 5 (02, 09, 18, 23, 27), 2 By 2 (Red Balls: 05, 11; White Balls: 17, 25), Lucky For Life (06, 13, 15, 36, 46 with Lucky Ball 18), and MyDay (Month: 07, Day: 27, Year: 56). As USA TODAY detailed, Nebraska’s lottery draws are meticulously scheduled: Powerball at 9:59 p.m. Central Time on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Saturdays; Mega Millions at 10 p.m. CT on Tuesdays and Fridays; and daily draws for Pick 3, Pick 5, Lucky For Life, 2 By 2, and MyDay. These regular draws, each with their unique mechanics and prize structures, keep the state’s lottery players engaged and ever-hopeful.
Meanwhile, up north in Minnesota, the state lottery’s February 4 results reflected the same Powerball numbers as elsewhere, but also included local favorites like Lotto America (02, 14, 30, 43, 45, Star Ball 10, ASB 05), Pick 3 (5, 8, 4), North 5 (08, 15, 21, 29, 33), and Gopher 5 (02, 17, 34, 36, 39). According to the St. Cloud Times, Minnesota’s lottery draws are staggered throughout the week, with Powerball and Lotto America sharing the Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday schedule, and other games like Pick 3, North 5, and Gopher 5 offering daily or thrice-weekly draws.
In the nation’s capital, D.C. Lottery players had a busy day, too. The Powerball numbers matched those drawn nationwide, but local games such as DC 2, DC 3, DC 4, and DC 5 offered multiple draws throughout the day (DC 2: 1:50PM 7-0; 7:50PM 3-2, DC 3: 1:50PM 3-2-5; 7:50PM 2-6-0; 11:30PM 2-6-8, and so on). Lucky For Life, another cross-state favorite, also featured (06, 13, 15, 36, 46 with Lucky Ball 18), giving Washingtonians a chance at a lifetime annuity prize.
For many, buying a lottery ticket is as much about the ritual as the reward. Tickets can be purchased in person at gas stations, convenience stores, and grocery stores in every participating state, and even at some airport terminals. Increasingly, digital options are available as well. Jackpocket, the official digital lottery courier of the USA TODAY Network, allows players in states like Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Washington D.C., and West Virginia to buy tickets, check results, and collect winnings all from their phones or computers. The app’s growing popularity signals a shift in how Americans engage with games of chance—convenience, after all, is king.
But what happens if you win? In Florida, for example, claiming your prize depends on the amount. Prizes of $599 or less can be picked up at any authorized retailer or district office. For prizes between $600 and $1 million, winners must visit a district office in person. Larger prizes, and those with an annual payment option, require a trip to lottery headquarters—except for Mega Millions and Powerball, which can be claimed at any district office. Notably, Florida law mandates public disclosure of winners’ full names, city of residence, game, date, amount won, and the retailer’s location. Transparency, it seems, is non-negotiable when millions are at stake.
For those curious about their odds, the Powerball prize structure is straightforward but steep. As Midwest Connect Gannett explained, matching just the Powerball wins $4, and matching one of the five numbers plus the Powerball yields the same small prize. Bigger prizes require more matches, and the elusive jackpot, of course, requires all six numbers. A single Powerball ticket costs $2, with an extra $1 for Power Play, which multiplies non-jackpot winnings, and another $1 for Double Play, offering a second chance at a $10 million prize.
If Powerball fever isn’t enough, Mega Millions continues to entice with its own massive jackpots. The next Mega Millions draw, scheduled for February 6, 2026, boasts a whopping $346 million estimated jackpot, with a cash option of $156.1 million. These eye-watering sums have made both games a staple of American culture, with past jackpots reaching as high as $2.04 billion (Powerball, November 2022, California).
Of course, while the headlines focus on the big winners, the lottery’s daily rhythm is sustained by countless smaller victories—players who match a few numbers, win a free ticket, or simply enjoy the thrill of possibility. The games, the rituals, and the dreams continue, night after night, state after state. Whether fortune smiled on anyone in this latest draw remains to be seen, but one thing is certain: the chase for the next big win is already underway.