JOHANNESBURG –
PowerBall and PowerBall Plus on Friday 13 March 2026 will open with combined jackpots of R135 million after a thirteenth consecutive rollover, a development that concentrates short‑term retail receipts, prize liabilities and regulatory attention into a single, high‑value draw. The most recent draw on 10 March 2026 produced no top‑tier winners and left a combined prize pool split into R93 million for PowerBall and R42 million for PowerBall Plus. Ticket pricing remains R5 per board for PowerBall and R2.50 for PowerBall Plus; the official sales window closes at 20:30 for the 21:00 draw.
The elevated jackpot and sustained rollovers are material to the business of South Africa’s lottery ecosystem because large jackpots compress retail liquidity timing, boost immediate sales volumes and increase near‑term reserves that flow through the National Lottery Distribution Trust Fund (NLDTF). Retail commissions, operator short‑term cashflows and the regulator’s distribution schedule can all move markedly during prolonged rollovers, altering both weekly revenue patterns for retailers and monthly funding available for grant disbursements. For public‑interest stakeholders, the current jackpot cycle is therefore not only a consumer moment, but also a meaningful fiscal event for the state‑mandated grant‑making system that sits behind the National Lottery.
Operators, contract change and regulatory framework
GlobalHeadlinez reporting confirms the incumbent operator remains ITHUBA Holdings for the current draw cycle, and that the national concession is scheduled to transfer to a new operator in June 2026. The transfer of operational responsibility to Sizekhaya Holdings has been announced as the fourth National Lottery and Sports Pools licence award, with a licence commencement expectation on or before 1 June 2026. The licence itself is issued under the Lotteries Act and overseen by the National Lotteries Commission as statutory regulator, which anchors the transition inside a defined public‑law framework rather than a purely commercial handover.
The National Lotteries Commission (NLC) retains statutory responsibility for oversight of the licence award, allocations into the NLDTF and the regulatory supervision of lottery and sports‑pool operations. The NLC’s mandate includes advising the Minister of Trade and Industry on policy matters and acting as trustee over funds designated for good‑cause projects, which makes large jackpot cycles-where gross receipts and prize rollovers are concentrated-significant for the Commission’s forecasting and disbursement schedules.
Commercial structure and stakeholders
Sizekhaya Holdings, the incoming operator, is structured as a consortium with reported strategic shareholders that include entities with existing gaming and media interests. Corporate filings and company disclosures indicate Sizekhaya is linked to the Goldrush Group through a 50% interest held by Goldrush in Sizekhaya, positioning established gaming investors within the operator consortium. The commercial transition will require operational handover of retail point‑of‑sale systems, mobile and digital platforms, intellectual property related to game products and the transfer of contractual supplier arrangements. Stakeholders across this chain-from technology vendors to retail partners-are directly exposed to execution risk if the handover is mishandled.
ITHUBA, the incumbent since the licence awarded in 2015, built nationwide retail distribution and mobile integration networks during its term; any transition will need to preserve continuity of sales, prize validation and NLDTF remittance mechanisms to avoid disruptions to revenue flows and claim processing. For retailers and players, the expectation is that the practical experience of buying a ticket and claiming a prize remains seamless across the licence boundary, even as back‑office systems and ownership structures change.
Prize mechanics, claims and retail economics
Operational mechanics for prize claims and retail payout caps remain in force for the current draw:
| Claim tier / payment channel | Threshold |
|---|---|
| In‑store retail payout | Up to R2,000 |
| Approved Prize Payment Centre (APPC) | R10,000 to R49,999 |
| Participating banks (EFT) | R49,999 to R249,999 (African Bank limited to R49,999) |
| ITHUBA office (in person) | Above R250,000 |
| Claim period | 365 days from draw date |
These payout thresholds and the requirement for winners to hold valid identification and a South African bank account (not older than three months) concentrate large‑value prize processing within operator and bank channels, creating predictable liquidity outflows for the operator and administrative workloads for banks and the NLC’s distribution oversight. They also form part of the sector’s anti‑money‑laundering and consumer‑protection architecture, giving regulators clearer visibility over high‑value prize flows.
Retail economics: the ticket price points and the size of the jackpot make the current draw attractive to casual and repeat players, increasing transactions per retailer and raising immediate commission payments. Those increased short‑term retail receipts are ordinarily reconciled to the operator’s gross sales figures and then apportioned among prizes, retailer commissions, operating costs and NLDTF allocations per the Lotteries Act and licence terms. For the public sector, that apportionment mechanism is the channel through which a spike in Friday‑night ticket sales can translate into additional funding for arts, sports and social‑development beneficiaries several months later.
Player odds, payout history and fiscal scale
The mechanics of play remain five numbers from 1-50 plus a PowerBall from 1-20. Published odds for the combined game are stated as 1 in 42,310,200 to win the top prize. The average historical jackpot payout figure referenced for PowerBall is R22 million; the highest recorded single payout referenced for the game is R232 million (February 2019). Those historical magnitudes illuminate how outlier jackpots drive sales spikes and create unusually large transfers to the NLDTF when won, effectively converting a single draw into a significant once‑off inflow for the grant‑funding system.
Large, multi‑week rollovers concentrate prize liabilities and can materially alter the timing of disbursements to good‑cause beneficiaries because NLDTF receipts are a function of net proceeds after prize and operating costs are accounted for in the remittance cycle. In practical terms, whether the R135 million jackpot is won on Friday or rolls again will influence when, and over what period, the underlying net proceeds are crystallised for allocation.
Transition risk, continuity and governance requirements
The scheduled operator handover introduces near‑term operational risk points that are business‑material: point‑of‑sale integration, mobile platform continuity, prize validation protocols and the integrity of financial reconciliation procedures. Contractual obligations embedded in the licence require a transition that preserves ticket‑sale continuity and timely remittance to the NLDTF; Sizekhaya’s public commitments include provisions for transferring intellectual property to government at licence expiry as part of lifecycle governance, underscoring that key game assets are ultimately treated as public‑interest infrastructure rather than private property alone.
For the NLC and the Minister’s office, the practical oversight tasks during the handover window include verifying the transfer of supplier contracts, testing reconciliation processes under live sales conditions, and confirming that APPC and bank claim arrangements remain operational without interruption. These are regulatory controls intended to shield beneficiaries and winners from administrative or financial disruption, and to reassure Parliament and the Auditor‑General that the integrity of lottery proceeds is maintained through a politically visible change of operator.
Operational timeline and immediate business effects
- 10 March 2026: Draw produced no top‑tier winners, leaving the combined jackpot at R135 million for the Friday 13 March 2026 draw.
- 13 March 2026: Scheduled PowerBall and PowerBall Plus draw at 21:00 (tickets sell until 20:30).
- 1 June 2026: Scheduled handover of the National Lottery and Sports Pools operator to Sizekhaya Holdings; incumbent operator activity will continue until that date.
Against this timetable, Friday’s draw is both a consumer event and a live test of the systems that will shortly need to be replicated under new ownership. For policymakers and governance stakeholders, the focus over the coming months will be less on the winning numbers than on whether the flow of funds from players to prizes and then to public‑benefit programmes remains uninterrupted and credible.



The operator transition scheduled for 1 June 2026 remains the confirmed next procedural step.





