
- Publish date: 2026-02-17
- Latest draw date: 2026-02-16
- Winning numbers: 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 16, 19, 21, 25, 33, 34, 36, 41, 49, 53, 55, 58, 63, 69, 80 — 3 4 7 8 9 16 19 21 25 33 34 36 41 49 53 55 58 63 69 80
- Jackpot: $500,000
New York Pick 10 results (Feb 16, 2026): the 20-number draw that exposes your “pattern brain”
The latest New York Pick 10 draw date provided is 2026-02-16. The winning numbers are:
3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 16, 19, 21, 25, 33, 34, 36, 41, 49, 53, 55, 58, 63, 69, 80
The jackpot shown in the provided data is $500,000.
Pick 10 results are uniquely shareable because you’re staring at 20 numbers at once. That’s enough data for your brain to start yelling: “Look! Clusters! Gaps! Streaks! This can’t be random!”
Here’s the slightly contrarian truth: when you draw 20 numbers, you should expect to see patterns. Not because the game is predictable—because humans are built to detect structure even when the process is random.
Quick Stats: what we can say (and only what we can say)
From the provided stats for this draw:
- Numbers drawn: 20
- Odd: 13
- Even: 7
- Sum: 683
- Jackpot listed: $500,000
Quick Stats table
| Stat | Value |
|---|---|
| Total numbers | 20 |
| Odd / Even | 13 odd / 7 even |
| Sum | 683 |
| Lowest → Highest | 3 → 80 |
| Jackpot | $500,000 |
Strategize for the Next New York Pick 10 Draw
Don’t play random numbers. Use the probability clusters detected by our engine.
If you like one extra derived stat (simple math, no extra assumptions): the average of the 20 numbers is 34.15 (683 ÷ 20).
The viral angle: this draw has “mini-runs” everywhere—because 20 numbers practically guarantees it
Look at the opening stretch: 3, 4 and then 7, 8, 9. That’s already two noticeable clusters in the first five numbers shown.
Later you get 33, 34, 36 (tight again), and on the higher end 53, 55, 58 (still bunched), plus the finishers 63, 69, 80.
When people see this, they often jump to one of two extremes:
- Extreme #1: “It’s not random, look at those clusters.”
- Extreme #2: “Clusters mean I should play clusters.”
Both extremes miss the point. Clusters can appear in random outcomes. And copying clusters doesn’t give you an edge—because you’re not influencing what gets drawn.
Myth vs Fact: Pick 10 edition
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| “So many odds (13) means evens are due.” | Draws are independent. The 13/7 split doesn’t force a correction. |
| “If you see 7-8-9, the next draw will have a run too.” | A run in one draw doesn’t predict a run in the next. |
| “Gaps prove manipulation.” | With 20 numbers, you’ll still see gaps; randomness doesn’t eliminate them. |
| “The average (34.15) tells you where to pick next time.” | Average summarizes this draw only; it’s not a forecast tool. |
What this result is actually good for: checking, clarity, and avoiding bad habits
1) Use the list to verify your ticket—slowly
Pick 10 is a lot of numbers. Most “I got robbed” stories are really “I misread one number.” If you played, check your line against the full list carefully. The most common mistakes happen with:
- Close numbers: 33 vs 34, 53 vs 55
- Fast scanning: missing a number in the middle of the list
- Assuming: “I saw 49 so I must have 49” (verify)
2) Don’t confuse “rare-looking” with “more likely”
Some players try to create lines that look nothing like this result—no clusters, perfectly even odd/even, evenly spaced across decades—because they think it increases odds.
It doesn’t. It just makes the ticket feel more “random” to a human. The draw doesn’t care what feels random.
3) If you’re trying to be practical: avoid popular-human picks
We can’t claim which numbers are most popular from this dataset, so we’ll stick to general player behavior: many people gravitate toward birthdays (1–31) and “nice-looking” patterns. This draw includes plenty of numbers under 31 (3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 16, 19, 21, 25), which is a reminder that those numbers are absolutely live in the pool.
If you always avoid low numbers because you think “high numbers hit more,” this result pushes back on that belief. If you always avoid high numbers because you only play birthdays, this result also pushes back—because it ends at 80.
Results recap (copy-friendly)
- Game: New York Pick 10
- Draw date: 2026-02-16
- Winning numbers (20): 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 16, 19, 21, 25, 33, 34, 36, 41, 49, 53, 55, 58, 63, 69, 80
- Jackpot listed: $500,000
The calm takeaway: patterns are expected; impulse spending isn’t
Pick 10 results can feel like they’re “saying something” because there’s so much to look at. But the healthiest way to use results is:
- Verify your ticket accurately
- Keep your play consistent (don’t tilt)
- Don’t turn pattern-spotting into a spending trigger
Responsible-play note
Play responsibly: only if you’re 18+ where legal, keep a budget, and don’t chase losses. If you feel yourself increasing spend because this draw “looks like a sign,” take a break and reset.
Pick 10 gives you a big, pattern-rich list. Enjoy the curiosity—but keep the decision-making boring. That’s how you stay in control. ✅
TrendPick AI: Quick Q&A
What were the New York Pick 10 winning numbers for 2026-02-16?
The winning numbers were 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 16, 19, 21, 25, 33, 34, 36, 41, 49, 53, 55, 58, 63, 69, 80.
What jackpot was listed for this New York Pick 10 draw?
The provided jackpot line shows $500,000.
How many numbers are drawn in this result list?
The provided stats show count_numbers = 20.
How many odd and even numbers were in the draw?
The provided stats list 13 odd numbers and 7 even numbers.
What was the sum of the winning numbers?
The provided stats list a sum of 683.
What is the average of the 20 numbers drawn?
Using the provided sum (683) divided by 20 numbers, the average is 34.15.