States Surpass $15B in Tax Revenue From Legal Cannabis

As of the end of 2022, states have reported a combined total of more than $15.1 billion in tax revenue from legal, adult-use cannabis sales since 2014, when sales began in Colorado and Washington.

In 2022 alone, legalization states generated more than $3.77 billion in cannabis tax revenue from adult-use sales. 

“States that have made the decision to legalize and regulate cannabis are benefiting from hundreds of millions in tax revenue each year,” says Toi Hutchinson, President and CEO of the Marijuana Policy Project. “These new streams of revenue are helping to fund crucial social services and programs across the country, such as education, alcohol and drug treatment, veterans’ services, job training and reinvestment in communities that have been disproportionately affected by the war on cannabis.”

Although cannabis sales have continued to generate billions in annual tax revenue, 2022 marked the first year with a decrease in tax revenues compared to the prior year. Even as new states came online, there was a slight decrease in total state cannabis tax revenue — from over $3.86 billion in 2021 compared to $3.77 billion in 2022. Prior to 2022, every legalization state had seen annual increases in cannabis tax revenue.

However, six states with the most mature legalization laws experienced decreases in cannabis tax revenue over the past year, while newer legalization states generated more cannabis tax revenue in 2022 than in 2021.

As Vicente LLP Director of Economics and Research Andrew Livingston says, 2022’s revenue decreases were “due to a multitude of factors,” and that one of them is likely Covid-related. “While 2022 cannabis taxes are lower in some established markets than they were in 2021, it’s important to know how Covid-19 and pandemic initiated lockdown orders increased cannabis demand. People could not spend their money going to concerts, going out to dinner, or vacation travel. So many people increased their consumption of consumer packaged goods. Cannabis was a product that could still be purchased and made the difficulty of staying at home for months on end watching TV shows and movies a bit more enjoyable.”

Twenty-two states have passed laws to legalize cannabis possession for adults 21 and older. All but two of them — Maryland and Virginia — have also legalized, regulated and taxed cannabis sales.

2022 State-by-State Totals: 
    •    Alaska: $28,649,408
    •    Arizona: $223,863,799
    •    California: $1,074,560,287 
    •    Colorado: $305,034,034
    •    Illinois: $562,119,019
    •    Maine: $25,329,534
    •    Massachusetts: $250,710,415
    •    Michigan: $326,049,074 
    •    Montana: $41,989,466
    •    Nevada: $196,952,338
    •    New Jersey: $20,139,655
    •    New Mexico: $36,684,235
    •    Rhode Island: $579,439
    •    Oregon: $150,316,424
    •    Washington: $529,443,420
    •    Vermont: $2,363,000

Year-by-Year Totals:
    •    2014: $68,503,980 
    •    2015: $264,211,871 
    •    2016: $530,521,110 
    •    2017: $736,534,982
    •    2018: $1,308,693,928
    •    2019: $1,749,459,667
    •    2020: $2,814,837,199
    •    2021: $3,866,974,690
    •    2022: $3,774,783,548
    •    CUMULATIVE TOTAL: $15,114,520,975

Feature photo by Richard T on Unsplash.