Arkansas Lottery Launches New $50,000 Scratch-Off Ticket

The Arkansas Lottery continues its troubling pattern of rolling out expensive scratch-off tickets designed to entice gamblers with big prizes and long odds.

This month the state-run lottery launched a new $20 scratch-off ticket called “$50,000 Stacked.” The game offers a top prize of $50,000, but like most lottery tickets, the odds are stacked against players.

The new ticket has overall odds of winning of just 1 in 3.03, meaning players will lose their money roughly two-thirds of the time. For the top $50,000 prize, only 80 winning tickets exist out of the entire game run.

The lottery’s own data shows that as of last week, $23.4 million in prizes remain available across all prize tiers for this single game. With a prize pool that massive, the lottery must expect Arkansans to spend a lot of money on this ticket.

We have written before about how expensive scratch-off tickets prey on the truly desperate. They entice Arkansans to spend a lot of money on a single lottery ticket in hopes of a big payout, but more often than not, people lose.

In 2023, ABC News highlighted the harm that scratch-off tickets can cause, writing:

A 2022 nationwide investigation of state lotteries by the Howard Center For Investigative Journalism at the University of Maryland found stores that sell tickets are disproportionately clustered in lower-income communities in nearly every state where the game is played. . . .

Les Bernal, the national director for the nonprofit group Stop Predatory Gambling, told ABC News that while states use the revenue from lottery sales to fund services like education, they are doing so off the backs of low-income residents.

The Arkansas Lottery’s own financial reports show it relies heavily on instant tickets. Rather than focusing on education funding, the lottery continues to rely on flashy marketing and expensive scratch-offs to keep gamblers engaged.

Arkansas families deserve better than a state-run gambling operation that targets the desperate and vulnerable.

Family Council has supported legislation that would restructure the Arkansas Lottery’s budget to increase spending on education.

The state-run lottery could provide millions of dollars more in scholarship funding if it would simply reduce its prize budget, increase its scholarship budget, and quit relying so heavily on scratch-off tickets.

Unfortunately, there simply doesn’t seem to be much impetus to do that.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.

Arkansas Lottery Still Betting Big on Scratch-Off Tickets

The Arkansas Lottery still relies heavily on expensive scratch-off tickets for revenue.

Since 2009, the state-run lottery has developed a reputation for depending on flashy marketing as well as rolling out a steady stream of new scratch-off tickets to keep gamblers engaged. This month the lottery unveiled several new scratch-off tickets — including a Jurassic World themed ticket that sells for $10 each.

But scratch-off tickets are often associated with problem gambling and gambling addiction. The excitement of instantly winning makes scratch-offs particularly appealing — and potentially addictive — for many people.

In 2023, ABC News highlighted the harm that scratch-off tickets can cause, writing:

A 2022 nationwide investigation of state lotteries by the Howard Center For Investigative Journalism at the University of Maryland found stores that sell tickets are disproportionately clustered in lower-income communities in nearly every state where the game is played. . . .

Les Bernal, the national director for the nonprofit group Stop Predatory Gambling, told ABC News that while states use the revenue from lottery sales to fund services like education, they are doing so off the backs of low-income residents.

We have written before about how expensive scratch-off tickets prey on the truly desperate. They entice Arkansans to spend a lot of money on a single lottery ticket in hopes of a big payout, but more often than not, people lose.

Statistically, people who buy a $10 or $20 lottery ticket stand to lose their money roughly two-thirds of the time.

Unfortunately, the Arkansas Lottery has a long history of relying on expensive scratch-off tickets with long odds and large prizes to encourage people to gamble. The Arkansas Lottery’s most recent financial reports show the vast majority of its revenue comes from instant tickets.

Family Council has supported legislation in the past that would restructure the Arkansas Lottery’s budget to increase spending on education.

The state-run lottery could provide millions of dollars more in scholarship funding if it would simply reduce its prize budget, increase its scholarship budget, and quit relying so heavily on scratch-off tickets.

Unfortunately, there simply doesn’t seem to be much impetus to do that.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.