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The Compare Tool

Compare Michigan Scratch-Offs

$8,000,000 Payout vs Millionaire Maker

Put any two active Michigan scratch-offs side by side. We score each on ValueScore, expected value, payout rate, odds, and top-prize health, then call a winner so you can tell which ticket your dollar goes further on.

Filter
OUR PICK
Wins 4 of 4 key metrics
Go with $8,000,000 Payout.

$8,000,000 Payout leads on a higher ValueScore (97 vs 90), a higher payout rate (0.4 pts), and better overall odds.

ValueScore
composite quality index
40100
$8,000,000 Payout
97
Millionaire Maker
90
Expected value
return per $1 played
$0.40$1.00
$8,000,000 Payout
$0.81
Millionaire Maker
$0.81
Payout rate
share returned to players
55%95%
$8,000,000 Payout
81.0%
Millionaire Maker
80.6%
Overall odds
lower = more chances to win
1 in 5.21 in 2.5
$8,000,000 Payout
1 in 3.17
Millionaire Maker
1 in 3.19
Top prize
advertised jackpot
$8,000,000 Payout
$8M
$8,000,000 Payout wins
Millionaire Maker
$6M
Top prizes left
share of the pool still unclaimed
$8,000,000 Payout
3
Millionaire Maker
1
Final score
Image credit: Michigan Lottery
Winner
$8,000,000 Payout
4
wins out of 4
Image credit: Michigan Lottery
Millionaire Maker
0
wins out of 4
Taking all 4 metrics together, $8,000,000 Payout wins the comparison.
How it works

Three steps to a smarter pick.

  1. STEP 1
    Pick Game A
    Choose any active Michigan scratch-off from the first dropdown. Filter by price if you want to compare tickets at the same tier.
  2. STEP 2
    Pick Game B
    Choose a second game from the other dropdown. Both games appear as ticket thumbnails once selected.
  3. STEP 3
    Read the verdict
    We compare six metrics including ValueScore, expected value, payout rate, and overall odds. The OUR PICK banner names the winner and explains why.
FAQ

Common questions.

What is ValueScore?

ValueScore is a composite index from 0 to 100 that blends expected value, prize quality, win frequency, inventory health, and top prize factor. Higher is better. It lets you rank games across price tiers without manually weighing four separate metrics.

Why are lower overall odds better?

Overall odds of 1 in X describe how many tickets you would need to buy on average to hit any prize. Lower X means more frequent wins, though most wins at that frequency are small. Pair overall odds with expected value to see if those wins are actually worthwhile.

How is expected value calculated?

Expected value is the average return per dollar played. We sum the value of every remaining prize tier, weighted by its probability, then divide by the ticket price. A $1 ticket returning $0.70 on average has an EV of $0.70.

How does the verdict pick a winner?

The OUR PICK verdict tallies six metrics: ValueScore, expected value, payout rate, overall odds, top prize, and the share of the top-prize pool still unclaimed. It flags the game that wins the most. When the metrics tie, the higher ValueScore breaks it, since ValueScore is the composite that already blends those factors and is how the rest of the site ranks games. On a dead heat across everything we show a toss-up instead of forcing a pick.

How often is this data updated?

Scratch off data refreshes daily from the Michigan lottery. Remaining top prizes can shift during the day as prizes are claimed, but price, overall odds, and payout rate only change when the lottery updates its public pack data.