
Wednesday's drawing saw no winner of the top prize, so the Powerball jackpot increased to $129 million for Saturday's drawing. According to the post on X, A $59.1 million one-time cash payout is available to anyone who combines all five numbers in Saturday's Powerball.
On January 18, a fortunate player in Oregon won $328.5 million, which was the inaugural jackpot-winning Powerball card of 2025. On March 29, a second jackpot winner won $527 million after matching all six Powerball numbers. The winning numbers from Saturday's Powerball drawing are shown below.

The following drawing is scheduled for Monday, April 21, just after 11 p.m. ET. You must purchase a $2 ticket in order to play the Powerball. There are several places where you can accomplish this, such as your neighbourhood grocery store, convenience store, or gas station. You can purchase Powerball tickets online in certain states. Players must match the red Powerball and all five white balls in any order to win the jackpot.
Players must match any combination of the five white balls and the rouge Powerball to win the prize.
On Mondays, Wednesdays, and Saturday evenings, there are Powerball drawings. The cash prize will keep increasing if no one wins the jackpot.
Disclaimer
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, tax, or legal advice. Market data, tax rules, and prices can change after the article date. TECHi and its authors may hold positions in securities or digital assets mentioned. Always conduct your own research and consult a licensed financial, tax, or legal professional before making decisions.
About the Author

Rabia Majeed covers indices, ETFs, and portfolio construction for TECHi readers building allocations rather than picking single names. Her coverage spans S&P 500 internals, sector-rotation signals, factor premiums (quality, momentum, low-vol), and the cost-basis details — expense ratios, tracking error, tax efficiency — that compound over long holds. She writes about the fund-structure decisions most retail coverage skips.





