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Marijuana tax payouts dip in Michigan amid sales slump

March 4, 2026

Michigan is distributing approximately $94 million in marijuana excise tax revenue to 313 local governments and tribal authorities, representing a slight decrease from the previous year's $99. 5 million allocation. The funds, derived from a 10% excise tax established in the 2018 recreational marijuana ballot initiative, will provide eligible municipalities, counties, and tribes roughly $54,000 for each licensed retail store or microbusiness within their jurisdiction.

Who is affected

  • 313 local government entities: 114 cities, 39 villages, 81 townships, 75 counties, and four federally recognized tribes
  • Ann Arbor (receiving approximately $1.2 million)
  • Wayne County and Detroit (receiving combined $88 million)
  • Berrien County (receiving the fourth largest payment)
  • Michigan schools (receiving over $109 million through School Aid Fund)
  • Road agencies (receiving over $109 million through Michigan Transportation Fund)
  • Cannabis businesses and industry workers
  • Cannabis industry association (filing lawsuit)
  • Medical marijuana market businesses
  • Recreational marijuana consumers

What action is being taken

  • The state Treasury is distributing $93.7 million to local governments and tribes
  • Ann Arbor is using its allocation to support affordable housing and a misdemeanor criminal charge diversion program for college students
  • A cannabis industry association is pursuing an ongoing lawsuit against the new wholesale tax
  • A bipartisan group of state senators has introduced legislation to repeal the 24% wholesale tax

Why it matters

  • This distribution represents a significant revenue source for local communities that have allowed marijuana businesses to operate within their borders, enabling them to fund public safety, infrastructure, and community programs. The declining payout signals a cooling cannabis market with falling sales and prices, which could impact future funding expectations for municipalities that have come to rely on this revenue stream. The new 24% wholesale tax, combined with existing excise and sales taxes, creates a total effective tax rate of approximately 40% on cannabis, which industry leaders warn could drive consumers back to illegal markets and threaten business viability and employment in the legal cannabis sector.

What's next

  • The repeal legislation for the 24% wholesale tax has been referred to the Senate Government Operations Committee
  • The ongoing lawsuit from the cannabis industry association against the wholesale tax continues
  • The new 24% wholesale tax is projected to generate over $400 million annually for road repairs going forward

Read full article from source: bridgedetroit.com

Marijuana tax payouts dip in Michigan amid sales slump