
- ⚡ California Lottery Daily Quick Report & Payout Info
- Winning Numbers: Fantasy 5: 4-9-14-26-34; SuperLotto Plus: 5-13-14-26-42 + Mega Ball: 20.
- Jackpot Status: SuperLotto Plus jackpot sat at $28 Million (no winner info provided here), while Fantasy 5’s top prize was $64,000.
- Drawing Time: Drawings are typically held in the evening (check your ticket and retailer for the official California draw schedule and cutoff times).
- Payout Chart: See the prize tier and pattern tables below for a quick read on today’s number shape.
- TrendPick AI Insight: A neat little repeat pair (14 & 26) showed up in both draws—because coincidence loves attention.
The California Lottery Daily results for Sunday, February 15, 2026 were Fantasy 5: 4-9-14-26-34 (jackpot listed at $64,000) and SuperLotto Plus: 5-13-14-26-42 with Mega Ball 20 (jackpot listed at $28 Million). This report does not include confirmation that SuperLotto Plus was hit, so treat the $28 Million as the advertised jackpot amount pending official winner updates.
California Lottery Daily lottery results – Sunday, February 15, 2026
California Fantasy 5 and California SuperLotto Plus results
California Fantasy 5 winning numbers:
49142634
California SuperLotto Plus winning numbers:
513142642+ Mega Ball:20
Now to the part where your wallet leans in. Fantasy 5 posted a $64,000 top prize—more “nice dinner and a paid-off car” than “private-island problems.” SuperLotto Plus, meanwhile, waved around a very serious $28 Million jackpot. Bad news for players hoping for an easy hit, but great news for the jackpot’s ego.
California Lottery Daily stats table – Fantasy 5 & SuperLotto Plus (Feb 15, 2026)
Let’s put today’s draws on a balance sheet. Not a financial one—unless you count emotional equity, in which case: mixed.
| Metric Analysis | Today’s Result | AI Assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Sum of Balls | Fantasy 5: 87; SuperLotto Plus (main 5): 100 | Both read as balanced-to-high totals (not ultra-low “tiny sum” draws). |
| Odd/Even Mix | Fantasy 5: 1 odd / 4 even; SuperLotto Plus: 2 odd / 3 even | Even-leaning day; Fantasy 5 is notably lopsided (a little volatile). |
| Spread (Range) | Fantasy 5 range: 30; SuperLotto Plus range: 37 | Wide coverage—numbers toured the map instead of carpooling. |
Deep dive patterns – California Lottery Daily (Feb 15, 2026)
Repeat numbers, distribution, and the “why you were so close” club
First, the headline-worthy coincidence: 14 and 26 landed in both Fantasy 5 and SuperLotto Plus. The TrendPick AI Engine detected a cross-game repeat cluster centered on mid-range values, with 14 acting like it paid rent in both draws. If you played those two across games, you at least earned the right to say “I had the vibe.” (Sadly, vibes are not redeemable at a claim center.)
Fantasy 5 (4-9-14-26-34) ran with an almost comical love of even numbers: four evens and a lone odd (9) trying not to feel awkward at the party. The spread from 4 to 34 (range 30) shows a healthy reach—no tight bunching, no cluster pileup. That’s great for variety, terrible for anyone married to “all in the teens” strategies.
SuperLotto Plus (5-13-14-26-42 + Mega Ball 20) looks like a draw that can’t decide whether it’s hanging out in the teens or sprinting into the 40s. You’ve got a mini-staircase (13-14), then a jump to 26, and then a big leap to 42. The Mega Ball 20 drops right in the middle like a referee trying to keep the peace.
Consecutive numbers? Technically yes: 13 and 14 in SuperLotto Plus. That’s the kind of pairing players either love (“it’s a sign!”) or hate (“it’s too obvious!”). The math, of course, is sarcastically indifferent. Consecutives are just as legitimate as any other combo—your odds don’t get a discount because the numbers are neighbors.
Low vs. high numbers: who showed up to work?
Both games leaned mid-to-high overall. Fantasy 5 only had two true low balls (4, 9) before moving into mid (14, 26) and upper (34). SuperLotto Plus brought one low (5), two teens (13, 14), one mid (26), and one high (42). In other words: a pretty classic “cover the board” posture—if the board were a dartboard and we’re all throwing blindfolded.
Payout talk & practical next steps – California Lottery Daily (Feb 15, 2026)
Prize tiers, cash lump sum realities, and where to claim
Quick reality check: not every win is a life rewrite. Each game has its own prize tier structure, and smaller hits can still be satisfying—especially when they bankroll your next ticket (responsibly) or pay for something that isn’t interest on a credit card.
If you do land a meaningful prize, remember that jackpot wins often come with a choice: cash lump sum vs. annuity (where offered/required by game rules). The lump sum is the “money now” option—popular with humans who have met inflation. The annuity is the “slow drip” option—popular with people who enjoy consistent payments and fewer immediate spending temptations. Either way, verify your ticket, sign it, and follow California Lottery instructions for the appropriate claim center process and deadlines.
Want to sharpen your approach for the next draw without pretending you can tame randomness? Analyze your strategy for the next draw with TrendPick AI for these games on NichebrAI: check the Fantasy 5 hub at https://nichebrai.com/california-fantasy-5/ and SuperLotto Plus insights at https://nichebrai.com/california-superlottoplus/. If you like number-pair style games, you can also poke around other tools like https://nichebrai.com/2by2/—because sometimes the best way to respect the odds is to understand them.
Final thought: today’s repeats (14 and 26) were fun, the even-heavy Fantasy 5 card was quirky, and SuperLotto Plus kept that $28 Million aura intact—at least based on the jackpot listing provided. If your lucky ticket didn’t cash, don’t worry. The odds were never exactly rooting for you anyway.
TrendPick AI: Quick Q&A
What were the California Lottery Daily winning numbers for Sunday, February 15, 2026?
See analysis above.
Did anyone win the SuperLotto Plus $28 Million jackpot on February 15, 2026?
See analysis above.
How do California Fantasy 5 and SuperLotto Plus prize tiers and odds work?
See analysis above.