25 years of the National Lottery

Laura Suter
14 November 2019

•    If you’d bought a ticket once a week, every week since launch you’d have spent £1,625*
•    That same stake invested each week would give you a pot of £4,000** today
•    The first ever lottery prize was £839,254 per person, with seven winners taking it home
•    To keep pace with inflation that pot would need to be £1.6 million today
•    If you’d not touched any of that first £839,254 jackpot money it would have grown to £2.9m today**
•    Or you could have taken £42,000 a year income*** and not touched the capital
•    The jackpot this week is estimated to be £7.2m, giving you a £360,000 annual income*** without touching the pot
•    To have generated that same £7.2m pot over the past 25 years you’d have to have invested £145,000 a year**

Laura Suter, personal finance analyst at investment platform AJ Bell, comments:

“It’s been 25 years since the first National Lottery draw on November 19th 1994. And despite the first draw failing to make the UK its first lottery millionaire, as seven people picked the top numbers, the National Lottery has gone on to make 5,550 people millionaires. 

“Loyal players who took a flutter on Lotto once a week every week since its launch would have bet a total of £1,625. Based on the fact that you have a one in more than 45 million chance of winning the Lotto draw, many will have come away empty handed. If they’d invested that stake each week instead they could be sitting on £4,000 today, or almost £8,000 if you bought two tickets a week.

“Instead of taking a flutter on the Lotto you could put a regular amount into investing, and hope that it returns more over the next 25 years. While it won’t make you a millionaire instantly, your chances of increasing your money are higher. 

“You can start regular investing for just £25 a month, which is around £5.80 a week – so less than the cost of three Lotto tickets. And by putting in this £25 you could have a pot worth £1,740 after just five years, and after 15 years you’d have almost £7,000** to play with. As the 50th anniversary of the Lotto came around you could be sitting on a tidy pot of just over £15,000. If you do all this in an ISA then – much like the Lottery winnings being tax-free – you won’t pay tax on the gains or income.

“If you are set on becoming a millionaire you’d need to significantly up your regular savings. To hit the £1 million mark after 25 years you’d have to pay in £20,000 every year, or £1,666 a month – equivalent to 194 Lotto tickets each week.”

*Based on £1 a week for the Lotto draw, until the stake changed to £2 in October 2003
** Based on 5% annual return after fees
***Before tax, based on withdrawing 5% a year and the funds growing by 5% a year after fees

Laura Suter
Director of Personal Finance

Laura Suter is director of personal finance at AJ Bell. She is a spokesperson for the company on a range of personal finance topics and is quoted in print media and regularly appears on TV and radio. She is also a founding ambassador of AJ Bell Money Matters, a campaign to get more women investing and engaging with their finances; she hosts two podcasts; and regularly speaks at events and webinars. Prior to joining AJ Bell she was a multi-award winning financial journalist, specialising in investments. Laura joined AJ Bell from the Daily Telegraph, where she was investment editor. She has previously worked for adviser publications in London and New York and has a degree in Journalism Studies from University of Sheffield.

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