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Michigan’s $3B Cannabis Industry is Under Pressure as Lawmakers Push to Repeal New 24% Tax

February 27, 2026

Michigan's cannabis industry is facing severe economic pressure after a 24% wholesale tax took effect in January 2026, layered on top of existing consumer taxes totaling 16%. The tax was inserted into a road funding package last fall without operating as standalone marijuana legislation, and the industry argues it violates the voter-approved 2018 legalization framework. State Senator Jonathan Lindsey has introduced bipartisan legislation to repeal the wholesale tax amid mounting evidence of market contraction, including the first annual sales decline since recreational legalization began, with sales dropping from $3.

Who is affected

  • Approximately 47,000 Michigan cannabis industry employees, with thousands having already lost jobs
  • Cannabis growers and processors (nearly one-third of cultivation operations have closed)
  • Retailers operating 2,171 active licensed cannabis businesses statewide
  • Specific businesses including a Webberville cannabis operation and an Upper Peninsula dispensary that laid off 61 employees
  • At least 14 cannabis businesses in Detroit that have closed since late 2022
  • Michigan consumers who may face higher prices or reduced product availability
  • Municipalities hosting cannabis businesses that could lose local revenue distributions
  • Schools, roads, and local governments that receive tax revenue from the cannabis industry
  • Workers across retail, cultivation, processing, transportation, compliance, and security sectors

What action is being taken

  • State Sen. Jonathan Lindsey is moving forward with Senate Bill 810 to repeal the 24% wholesale tax
  • Businesses are adjusting contracts, pricing models, and compliance systems in response to the tax
  • Growers and processors are deciding whether to absorb costs, renegotiate contracts, or raise wholesale prices
  • Retailers are determining whether to pass higher costs to consumers, reduce promotions, or compress margins further
  • A legal challenge against the tax is continuing through litigation (though a preliminary injunction was not secured)
  • The Michigan Cannabis Industry Association is urging lawmakers to repeal the tax

Why it matters

  • This situation represents a critical inflection point for one of the nation's most established legal cannabis markets, threatening to undermine the core objectives voters approved in 2018: displacing the illicit market, protecting consumers through regulation, and generating stable public revenue. The wholesale tax threatens the industry's viability at a moment when Michigan's cannabis sector has already generated over $13 billion in total sales and approximately $2.2 billion in tax revenue for schools, roads, and local governments since legalization. The tax risks pushing consumers back to unregulated gray and illicit markets, particularly given Michigan's existing caregiver market that operates outside the same regulatory structure and new competition from Ohio's recently launched legal sales. If the tax forces widespread business failures, it could eliminate tens of thousands of jobs and significantly reduce the hundreds of millions in annual tax revenue the state currently receives, while also raising constitutional questions about whether the Legislature circumvented voter-approved tax structures by embedding the change in infrastructure legislation rather than passing it as standalone marijuana policy requiring supermajority approval.

What's next

  • Senate Bill 810's legislative path remains uncertain and will require lawmakers to address how to replace projected road funding revenue of approximately $420 million
  • The ongoing legal challenge against the tax will continue through the court system
  • Operators will continue adjusting their business operations month by month in what industry observers describe as "a holding pattern" and "survival exercise"
  • The market will likely see continued business closures and job losses as companies determine whether they can sustain profitability under the new tax structure

Read full article from source: Michigan Chronicle

Michigan’s $3B Cannabis Industry is Under Pressure as Lawmakers Push to Repeal New 24% Tax