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- EDITIONS:
Spanish News Today
Alicante Today
Andalucia Today
Date Published: 18/12/2025
How much do you really get if you win El Gordo this Christmas?
A closer look at what Spain’s famous Christmas Lottery actually pays out once tax is deducted
As excitement builds ahead of Spain’s Christmas Lottery draw, many people dream about landing El Gordo, but fewer know exactly how much of that headline prize they would actually take home.While the top prize is famously generous, Spanish law means the Treasury always takes a slice. Under Law 16/2012, prizes awarded by the State Lottery and Betting Company are subject to a special tax, applied separately to each ticket. That rule applies whether you win alone or share the prize with others.
The good news is that not all winnings are taxed. Any prize worth less than €40,000 is completely exempt. For anything above that threshold, only the amount exceeding €40,000 is taxed, at a flat rate of 20%.
So what does that mean in real terms for El Gordo? The advertised prize is €400,000 per ticket. Once the tax-free €40,000 is deducted, the remaining €360,000 is taxed at 20%, which comes to €72,000. In practice, the final amount paid to the winner is €328,000.
Banks handle the tax process directly, requesting identification from winners and reporting the payout to the State Lottery. As one explanation puts it, the prize is paid “minus the withholding tax”, something that often surprises first-time winners.
The second and third prizes are treated in much the same way. The second prize of €125,000 is reduced to a net payout of €108,000 once tax is applied. The third prize, worth €50,000, is only lightly affected, leaving winners with €48,000.
For many people, Christmas Lottery tickets are shared among family, friends or workmates. In those cases, the €40,000 tax exemption must be split proportionally between participants, and the person collecting the prize must prove to the Tax Agency that the money has been properly distributed.This year’s lottery has attracted even more attention following a call to rise in the overall jackpot size, which lottery workers say would reflect the growing scale of the Christmas draw.
At the same time, officials have been reminding players to be cautious, as fake tickets continue to circulate in the run-up to the draw.
And while the tax rules may take a little shine off the headline figures, El Gordo remains a uniquely Spanish tradition. For many residents, it is less about becoming rich overnight and more about sharing a moment of collective excitement that has defined Christmas in Spain for generations.
For those lucky enough to win, even after tax, it is still a Christmas surprise most people would happily accept.
You might also be interested in: The 2025 Christmas Lottery: Who's barred from playing and how not to lose it all if you win
Images: wikicommons
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