How Many Scratch-Off Tickets Are in a Roll? Pack Sizes Explained

Whether you're thinking about buying a whole roll as a gift, pooling with friends, or just curious what's behind the counter at your local deli, the answer depends on the ticket price.

Here's the complete breakdown for New York scratch-off games.

Tickets Per Roll by Price

Ticket Price Tickets per Roll Total Cost (Full Roll)
$1300$300
$2150–200$300–$400
$3100–150$300–$450
$560–100$300–$500
$1050–60$500–$600
$2030–40$600–$800
$2530$750
$3030$900

Pack sizes can vary by specific game. These are typical ranges for NY Lottery scratch-off games.

Notice the pattern?
The total cost of a full roll usually falls between $300 and $900 regardless of the ticket price. The lottery adjusts the pack size so that retailers are managing a similar dollar value per roll, whether it's $1 tickets or $30 tickets.

Roll vs. Pack vs. Book: What's the Difference?

You'll hear all three terms used interchangeably, but technically:

In most New York stores, one pack = one roll. The retailer activates the pack on their lottery terminal, puts it on the dispenser, and sells tickets sequentially from the beginning of the roll.

Can You Buy a Whole Roll?

Yes. There is no law in New York preventing you from buying an entire roll of scratch-off tickets. Some things to know:

Is Buying a Whole Roll Worth It?

This is where most people get the math wrong. Let's break it down.

What You Get

When you buy a full roll, you guarantee that you receive every ticket in that particular pack. If the pack contains 10 small winners and 2 medium winners, you'll hit all of them. No one else can "take" a winner before you.

What You Don't Get

A better expected return. The house edge is baked into the print run, not into individual packs. Across the entire print run of a game (which may be millions of tickets), the lottery pays out its published percentage — say, 65% on a $5 game. An individual pack of 100 tickets is a tiny sample from that run.

The whole-roll math
Example: You buy a full $5 roll of 100 tickets for $500. If the game has a 65% payout rate, you'd expect to get back about $325 on average across the full print run. But one pack of 100 is a small sample. You might get back $280, or $400, or $200. The variance is high, but the expected value is always less than what you paid. Buying the whole roll doesn't change the math — it just makes the experience more predictable.

When Buying a Roll Makes Sense

When It Doesn't

How Winners Are Distributed Across Packs

A common question: "Is every pack guaranteed to have the same number of winners?"

No. Winners are randomly distributed across the entire print run. One pack might have slightly more winners than average and another slightly fewer. Over thousands of packs, it averages out to the published odds, but any individual roll has natural variance.

Think of it like shuffling a deck of cards and dealing 5-card hands. Some hands will be better than others, even though the deck is fair. The same applies to scratch-off packs.

Typical winners in a full roll
A $5 game with overall odds of 1 in 3.80 and a 100-ticket roll would statistically contain about 26 winners. But most of those are $5 prizes (your money back) or $10 prizes. The larger prizes — $100, $500, $1,000+ — are rare even in a full roll. You'll likely see 20-26 small winners, 2-5 modest winners, and maybe 1 decent one if you're lucky.

Bottom Line

Rolls range from 30 tickets ($30 games) to 300 tickets ($1 games), with total costs between $300 and $900. You can buy whole rolls in New York, and it's a fun way to play or gift scratch-offs — but it doesn't improve your odds or expected return.

If you're going to spend the money anyway, choose the game with the best expected value and the most prizes remaining. That matters more than buying a whole roll of the wrong game.

Find the Best Game Before You Buy a Roll

Every NY scratch-off ranked by Smart Score with live remaining prize data. Don't spend $500 on the wrong game.

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Alex P.
Lead Data Analyst at ScratchOffsNY

Alex builds the Smart Score model and analyzes scratch-off data daily using official NY Lottery prize reports and open data APIs. All rankings are based on math, not gut feeling. Learn about our methodology.