If you bought a Mega Millions ticket in Ohio, Pennsylvania, or West Virginia, you could be a millionaire.

Although no one bought a ticket with all the numbers drawn Tuesday to win the Mega Millions $1.1 billion jackpot, lottery officials say two tickets sold in Ohio and one in Pennsylvania and West Virginia had the five numbers needed to be worth $1 million each.

Another thirteen tickets were sold in other states with the white balls 7, 13, 14, 15 and 18 to win $1 million Match Five prizes. Three tickets sold in Connecticut, Florida, and New York also got the gold Mega Ball 9, worth $3 million each.

According to the Ohio Lottery Commission, Ohio's million dollar winners were sold in Marysville and Upper Sandusky.

The big jackpot up for grabs in Friday’s drawing has grown to $1.35 billion or $707.9 million cash.  If won at that amount, it would be the second largest jackpot in Mega Millions history.

While many consider Friday the 13th an unlucky day, it has been rewarding for Mega Millions players over the years, with six previous jackpots won on that date.

Michigan has been particularly lucky with Mega Millions jackpots on Friday the 13th, winning four of them (June 2008, May 2011, June 2014 and October 2017).

That 2017 jackpot was shared with a winner in Rhode Island. Other jackpots on Friday the 13th have been won in New York (March 2009) and Ohio (November 2015). None of them, however, came close in size to the estimated $1.35 billion up for grabs later this week.

The only Mega Millions jackpot larger than Friday’s estimated prize is the game record of $1.537 billion, won in South Carolina on October 23, 2018.