New York Lottery Guide

New York lottery trust fund —what the highest state tax does to 100 years

New York's combined state and city tax can reach 14.78%. Here's exactly what that means for lottery trust distributions over four generations.

Model your scenario free
10.9%
NY top marginal rate
+3.876%
NYC additional rate
$15,028
NY dist. tax yr 1 (default)

New York has some of the highest lottery trust taxes in the US

New York state income tax reaches 10.9% at the top bracket. New York City residents pay an additional 3.876% city income tax, bringing the combined state+city rate to approximately 14.776% — higher than California's top 13.3% rate. For a lottery trust with regular distributions, this is a significant annual cost.

Year 1 state tax (default $120M scenario, New York state): approximately $15,028 per person in state income tax on distributions, based on the full 9-bracket marginal schedule applied to a $269,466 gross distribution. Note: New York also withholds 10.9% on the prize itself at receipt — reducing the starting corpus from $32.9M (no prize tax) to $26.9M — which is why the distribution gross is lower than California's. For New York City residents, add approximately $10,446 in city tax — bringing combined state+city distribution tax to approximately $25,474 per person per year.

New York's lottery trust legal framework

New York allows lottery winners to claim through a trust. New York generally requires public disclosure of lottery winners, though the trust name (rather than the individual's name) may appear in some circumstances. Specific advice from a New York attorney is essential before structuring any claim.

New York's 9-bracket marginal structure

New York has nine tax brackets ranging from 4% to 10.9%. The Dynasty model applies these full marginal brackets rather than a flat rate. On a $269,466 distribution (the default scenario after NY's 10.9% prize withholding reduces the starting corpus), the effective New York state rate on distributions is approximately 5.6% — not the often-quoted top rate of 10.9%. This is because most of the distribution falls in the 5.5%–6.85% brackets, with only a small portion reaching higher rates.

New York vs Florida: the annual cost

A New York state resident receives approximately $206,620 net per person in Year 1 on the default scenario — versus $269,014 for a Florida resident. That $62,394 gap per person per year reflects both the 10.9% NY prize withholding at receipt (which reduces the starting corpus by $5.95M) and the ongoing state income tax on distributions. Over 10 years, the cumulative gap per beneficiary exceeds $500,000. Dynasty models this difference directly — switch between states in the dropdown to compare.

Trust siting options for New York residents

New York taxes residents on worldwide income regardless of where a trust is sited. A New York resident who is a beneficiary of a Nevada or South Dakota trust still pays New York income tax on distributions received. Trust siting only eliminates the state-level tax if the beneficiaries themselves move out of New York. This is a critical distinction that many online articles get wrong.

The Dynasty "Trust outside CA / no state tax" toggle models the scenario where state tax is eliminated — useful for comparing the theoretical maximum saving, but not a prediction of what any specific structure will achieve without legal advice.

Mega Millions and New York

New York is a major Mega Millions market. New York state withholding of 10.9% applies to Mega Millions prizes won in New York. This is in addition to the 37% federal withholding, meaning approximately 47.9% of the prize is withheld at source before any trust structure is in place. On a $54.6M cash equivalent this means only $28.4M reaches the trust after combined prize withholding — before setup costs.

Model a New York lottery trust scenario

Select New York in Dynasty's state dropdown. See exactly what the 9-bracket marginal rate produces versus Florida, Texas, or a no-state-tax scenario — across 100 years.

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Should a New York lottery winner consider moving?

This is a question for a tax attorney, not a calculator. What Dynasty can do is show the numerical difference between staying in New York and a no-state-tax scenario. The decision involves much more than tax — family, career, cost of living, and personal preference. But understanding the numbers is the right starting point.