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Did anyone win Powerball jackpot last night, June 7, 2025? Winning numbers, lottery results

Did anyone win Powerball jackpot last night, June 7, 2025? Winning numbers, lottery results

Yahoo08-06-2025

The Powerball lottery jackpot continues to grow after no one matched all six numbers from Wednesday night's drawing.
Grab your tickets and check your numbers to see if you're the game's newest millionaire.
Here are the numbers for Saturday, June 7, Powerball jackpot worth an estimated $44 million with a cash option of $19.8 million.
Saturday night's drawing will take place at 10:59 p.m. ET. The winning numbers for Wednesday night's drawing were 5, 17, 23, 35, 45, and the Powerball is 24. The Power Play was 10X.
Powerball, Mega Millions: Want to win the lottery? Here are luckiest numbers, places to play
Results are pending.
Powerball winner? Lock up your ticket and go hide. What to know if you win the jackpot
You only need to match one number in Powerball to win a prize. However, that number must be the Powerball worth $4. Visit powerball.com for the entire prize chart.
Matching two numbers won't win anything in Powerball unless one of the numbers is the Powerball. A ticket matching one of the five numbers and the Powerball is also worth $4. Visit powerball.com for the entire prize chart.
Powerball numbers you need to know: These most commonly drawn numbers could help you win
The Powerball jackpot for Saturday, June 7, 2025, grows to an estimated $44 million with a cash option of $19.8 million, according to powerball.com.
Drawings are held three times per week at approximately 10:59 p.m. ET every Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
A single Powerball ticket costs $2. Pay an additional $1 to add the Power Play for a chance to multiply all Powerball winnings except for the jackpot. Players can also add the Double Play for one more $1 to have a second chance at winning $10 million.
Mega Millions numbers: Anyone win Friday night's drawing?
Friday night's winning numbers were 16, 40, 54, 56, 57, and the Mega Ball was 3.
The Mega Millions jackpot for Tuesday's drawing continues to grow at an estimated $243 million with a cash option of $108.0 million after no one matched all six numbers to win the Mega Millions jackpot, according to megamillions.com.
Here is the list of 2025 Powerball jackpot wins, according to powerball.com:
$328.5 million — Jan. 18; Oregon.
$526.5 million — March 29; California
$167.3 million — April 26; Kentucky.
$204.5 million — June 1; California.
Here are the all-time top 10 Powerball jackpots, according to powerball.com:
$2.04 billion — Nov. 7, 2022; California.
$1.765 billion — Oct. 11, 2023; California.
$1.586 billion — Jan. 13, 2016; California, Florida, Tennessee.
$1.326 billion — April 6, 2024; Oregon.
$1.08 billion — July 19, 2023; California.
$842 million — Jan. 1, 2024; Michigan.
$768.4 million — March 27, 2019; Wisconsin.
$758.7 million — Aug. 23, 2017; Massachusetts.
$754.6 million — Feb. 6, 2023; Washington.
$731.1 million — Jan. 20, 2021; Maryland.
Powerball numbers: Anyone win Wednesday night's drawing?
Here are the nation's all-time top 10 Powerball and Mega Millions jackpots, according to powerball.com:
$2.04 billion, Powerball — Nov. 7, 2022; California.
$1.765 billion, Powerball — Oct. 11, 2023; California.
$1.586 billion, Powerball — Jan. 13, 2016; California, Florida, Tennessee.
$1.58 million, Mega Millions — Aug. 8, 2023; Florida.
$1.537 billion, Mega Millions — Oct. 23, 2018; South Carolina.
$1.35 billion, Mega Millions — Jan. 13, 2023; Maine.
$1.337 billion, Mega Millions — July 29, 2022; Illinois.
$1.326 billion, Powerball — April 6, 2024; Oregon
$1.22 billion, Mega Millions — Dec. 27, 2024; California.
$1.13 billion, Mega Millions — March 26, 2024; New Jersey.
Chris Sims is a digital content producer at Midwest Connect Gannett. Follow him on Twitter: @ChrisFSims.
This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Winning Powerball numbers 6/7/25: Jackpot results for June 7 lottery drawing

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'Our snoring room is the key to marriage preservation' – 3 women reveal how creating separate sleeping spaces has delivered marital harmony
'Our snoring room is the key to marriage preservation' – 3 women reveal how creating separate sleeping spaces has delivered marital harmony

Yahoo

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'Our snoring room is the key to marriage preservation' – 3 women reveal how creating separate sleeping spaces has delivered marital harmony

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Snoring rooms first entered the public consciousness about 15 years ago when it was widely reported that Tom Cruise had converted a spare bedroom in his sprawling Beverley Hills home into a 'snoratorium.' Fast forward to 2025 and many high-end architects now consider snoring rooms – a second master bedroom where disgruntled spouses can retreat when their partner's nocturnal racket becomes overwhelming – a must-have for couples with enough space. For London-based Interior designer Pia Pelkonen, it's a relatively common request. 'Snoring rooms have quietly cropped up in the design process more and more over the past few years – often as a part of a wider brief for a calm, grown-up home," she says. "Clients tend to mention them with a laugh... and then a sigh of relief.' In Pia's experience, very few are willing to openly admit to sleeping apart from partners, with many choosing to describe the space as a 'sleep sanctuary' or 'second master.' According to a 2024 survey from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, 29% of Americans have chosen to sleep in a separate bed from their partner – whether in the same or a different room. This practice is also, rather melodramatically, labelled as having a 'sleep divorce'. So why are snoring rooms still spoken about in hushed and negative tones, if mentioned at all? Mum of two and full-time management consultant Charlotte*, 48, is delighted with the positive effect sleeping separately from her snoring husband has made. But, like all three ladies I interviewed, she preferred not to use her surname for fear of word spreading. 'When I first owned up to regularly sleeping apart from my husband, my friend told me it was the beginning of the end for us. The irony is, it's been a complete saviour, but I don't tend to disclose it openly,' Charlotte says. 'I'm not sure the kids have noticed, as I'm a lark whereas my husband's an owl, so they rarely saw us in bed together even when we permanently shared a room.' "Since my husband and I created separate sleeping spaces, we've been so much happier' My friend Clemmie*, 45, shares her home with four kids, two dogs and a loudly snoring husband. She created two adjoining bedrooms when recently redesigning their farmhouse, and cannot understand why sharing a bed is considered such an essential facet of marital harmony. 'The societal expectation that happy couples sleep together when, for so many of us, that leads to chronic sleep deprivation, is crazy. Since my husband and I created separate sleeping spaces, we've been so much happier,' Clemmie says. 'Not only has the hugely disruptive snoring stopped but we naturally power down in different ways at different times of night so we can each indulge our own bedroom routine with no irritating interruptions. 'I was reminded of how vital this is to our relationship on a recent holiday, when I found myself sleeping on the bathroom floor of our villa for four nights, unable to quieten the racket of my husband next to me in bed.' Despite also being married to an occasionally sonorous sleeper, I've never broached the topic of regularly sleeping apart. Instead, I find myself frequently sulking off to the spare room's single bed when not even my trusty pillow over the head trick lessens the noise. Snoring room convert Anna*, 42, who works in publishing, encourages anyone suffering in silence to speak up after she realised the detrimental effect both her snoring and her husband's frequent kicks under the duvet were having. When re-designing her two-bedroom apartment in West London, she took the opportunity to tackle the issue head-on. 'Nick thought I'd be offended if he suggested sleeping apart, so we'd both been dancing around it. Once it was on the table, we agreed on a beautiful solution that made it feel like a luxury, not a failure – his and hers sleeping spaces,' she says. 'It's been a revelation. I sleep guilt-free, and he just manages to sleep, which was a novelty for him for a while! We're both better rested, less snappy and generally more human during the day. It's made the world of difference.' The key to a successful snoring room is that you don't feel like you're being relegated to a lesser space. Pia advises making the room feel as inviting as the master suite. 'I try to make both bedrooms cohesive, ensure beds aren't positioned against adjoining walls for better soundproofing, then make a few tweaks to infuse each client's personality into their own space.' But with so many factors, from the perimenopause to nocturnal teenagers, getting in the way of intimacy in mid-life, do separate rooms lead to a change in conjugal relations? According to Anna, no. 'It's improved things for us. When you're not exhausted, you've got more energy for everything else, including each other," she says. "It's made our relationship more fun again and there's something playful and intentional about one of us 'visiting' the other in bed.' Indeed, Wendy Troxel, author of Sharing the Covers: Every couple's guide to better sleep says that better sleep can lead to better sex. In fact, she argues in her book, good sleep is important for good sex as it has a profound impact on our hormones, including testosterone. Aware of my frequently disturbed beauty sleep, my friend Clemmie turned the questions on me at the end of our interview. 'Sleep is sacred and you're the engine room of your family. Didn't those early child-rearing years show you that you can't operate like that in a permanently sleep-deprived state?' She has a point. Perhaps that spare eaves bedroom currently serving as a family dumping ground is crying out to be converted into my own occasional sleep sanctuary. Something tells me my husband might think it was a worthwhile investment in wifely happiness. * The last names of these women have been omitted at their request, for privacy.

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