When Do Progressive Jackpots Usually Hit?
Every progressive jackpot follows the same basic rhythm: it seeds, it grows, it drops, it resets. The exact timing is random, but across hundreds of historical drops we can see clear patterns in when each network tends to pay out. Here is what the data shows.
There is no fixed schedule - but there is a range
Progressive jackpots are not on a timer. Every spin uses an independent random number generator, so the outcome of one spin has zero influence on the next. What we can measure is the typical range in which each jackpot has historically dropped, both in value and in time since the previous payout.
For example, Mega Moolah averages a drop roughly every 66 days, but individual cycles range from under 30 days to over 150 days. The cycle is random - the long-term average is remarkably stable.
Typical drop windows by network
Drop frequency depends mainly on three factors: how many casinos feed the network, how many connected games contribute, and the contribution rate per spin. Here are the long-term averages for the main networks we track:
- Mega Moolah - approx every 66 days, average drop near CA$12.5M
- WowPot - approx every 90 days, average drop near CA$7.8M
- Hall of Gods - approx every 110 days, average drop near CA$8.6M
- Dream Drop Mega - approx every 52 days, capped by must-win at CA$15.5M
- Mega Fortune - approx every 60-90 days, average drop near CA$6.2M
How to read 'overdue'
A jackpot becomes statistically "overdue" when its current value exceeds the historical average drop value. That is the entire basis of our heat level system. A CA$15.5M Mega Moolah is sitting above its mean drop, so each additional spin carries higher expected value than at CA$6.2M, even though the probability of triggering the bonus round is unchanged.
Important: overdue does not mean imminent. A jackpot can sit above average for weeks. The point is that the longer it stays there, the larger the eventual payout will be.
Time-of-day and day-of-week effects
Network traffic peaks in European evenings and weekends, which simply means more spins per minute and therefore slightly higher odds of any single jackpot dropping during those windows. This is purely a volume effect - the RNG does not care what time it is.
Anecdotally, several record Mega Moolah wins have landed on weekends, but the sample size is too small to call this a pattern. Treat any time-of-day theory with healthy skepticism.
Using the data to time your play
The practical takeaway: track the current value against the historical mean, and play when the jackpot sits in the upper half of its typical range. Use our live tracker to see where every major network stands right now, and our drop frequency guide for full historical cycles.
