Cannabis Education
Cannabis Taxes Explained: How Much You're Really Paying and Why
A plain-English guide to cannabis taxes explained: what adults 21+ should know, how to think about it, and where to go for the next level of detail.
·3 min read

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## The Short Answer
Cannabis at a regulated dispensary carries multiple tax layers: state cannabis excise tax, state sales tax, local taxes in some jurisdictions, and federal tax consequences that indirectly raise prices. For adults 21 and older, the total tax burden on adult-use cannabis can be 20 to 40 percent of the pre-tax price, which is why regulated cannabis costs more than the illicit market and why medical cards (with reduced or no tax) save meaningful money for regular consumers.
## Taxes at the Register
When you buy cannabis at a regulated dispensary, you may see:
**State cannabis excise tax.** Set by each state specifically for cannabis. Often 10-20 percent of wholesale or retail price.
**State sales tax.** Normal state sales tax applied on top of the cannabis tax in many states.
**Local cannabis tax.** Some cities and counties add their own cannabis tax.
**Medical products:** Often exempt from one or more of the above in states with both programs.
## Behind the Scenes: 280E
Federal tax code 280E prevents businesses engaged in trafficking Schedule I or II substances from deducting ordinary business expenses. For cannabis businesses, this means they pay federal income tax on gross revenue rather than net income, with an effective tax rate often 40 to 70 percent.
This cost is passed to consumers in the form of higher retail prices. Rescheduling cannabis to Schedule III (a proposed but not finalized change) would eliminate 280E's application, potentially reducing retail prices substantially.
## Why the Illicit Market Still Exists
Cannabis taxes are a significant reason the illicit market persists despite adult-use legalization. Illicit cannabis:
- Carries no state excise tax.
- Carries no sales tax.
- Has no 280E cost pass-through.
- Can undercut regulated prices by 30-50 percent or more.
This has been a policy challenge in every state. The tradeoff: higher taxes fund the regulatory framework and state revenue but make it harder to displace illicit sales.
## Medical Card Math
For regular consumers in states with medical programs:
- **Certification cost:** $75-300 for initial certification.
- **Renewal cost:** $75-200 annually.
- **Tax savings:** 20-40 percent on medical products.
Breakeven typically occurs at $500-2000 of annual cannabis spending. For heavy consumers, a medical card saves money; for occasional consumers, the math doesn't work.
## Where the Tax Revenue Goes
State cannabis tax revenue typically funds:
- Administrative costs of the regulatory program.
- Public education on cannabis.
- Social equity and expungement programs.
- General fund revenue.
Specific allocations vary significantly by state.
## Consumer Notes
- **The register total includes tax.** Budget accordingly.
- **Medical card holders should present cards** at checkout for tax reduction.
- **Deals and discounts** typically apply to pre-tax price in most states.
- **Keep receipts** for tax-exempt medical expense tracking if applicable.
## Where to Go Next
Related reading: [medical vs recreational dispensaries](/blog/medical-vs-recreational-dispensaries-key-differences-explained), [understanding cannabis pricing](/blog/understanding-cannabis-pricing-why-costs-vary-and-how-to-find-value), and [federal cannabis laws explained](/blog/federal-cannabis-laws-explained-where-rescheduling-and-reform-stand).
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*This article is consumer education for adults 21+. Nothing here is medical, legal, or financial advice. Cannabis laws vary by state, always verify your state's current rules and, for health questions, consult a licensed clinician. For regulated New York retail, verify licensing via the OCM QR-code system at [cannabis.ny.gov](https://cannabis.ny.gov).*