Lottery officials in Washington state announced on Tuesday that the sole winning ticket for the $754.6 million Powerball jackpot was sold at a department shop in a Seattle suburb.
The winning numbers were 5, 11, 22, 23, 69, and 7. The Powerball number was 7.
Lottery officials said that the winning ticket was bought on Sunday at a Fred Meyer store in Auburn, which is about 30 miles (48 kilometers) south of Seattle. The store will get a bonus of $50,000.
The winner hasn’t shown up yet.
It’s the second time a Powerball jackpot ticket has been sold in Washington state, and both were bought in Auburn. The first one was a win of $90 million in 2014.
Lottery officials say that another $1 million prize from a ticket bought in November in Airway Heights, which is close to Spokane, is still unclaimed. Winners of the lottery have 180 days to get their money.
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In a statement released early Tuesday morning, Powerball officials said that a single ticket matched all six numbers and that ticket sales made the jackpot more than $747 million.
The full jackpot is for a winner who chooses an annuity, which is a series of payments made over 29 years, with each payment increasing by 5% each year. The winner can also choose to get $407.2 million in cash all at once.
Powerball said that the amounts of both prizes are the amounts before taxes.
The lottery’s website says that the estimated jackpot for the next drawing, which will take place on Wednesday, is $20 million.

The last time someone won the Powerball jackpot was on November 19. Because no one won for so long, the prize grew and grew until it was the ninth largest in U.S. history.
When interest rates were lower in the past, jackpots were smaller, but now they are bigger because of higher interest rates. Most winners would rather get cash right away.
With chances of 1 in 292,2 million, the game is able to attract more participants by offering larger payouts. A player in Maine used this method to win $1.35 billion in January’s Mega Millions and a player in California used it to win $2.04 billion in November’s Powerball, both of which are records. Neither of the rewards has been claimed.
The District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands are among the other jurisdictions where you may buy a Powerball ticket.