Could this be the first year Colorado marijuana sales don’t set a record?Posted by On


DENVER (KDVR) — Colorado joins other marijuana-legal states in a post-COVID pattern of leveling sales.

State marijuana revenue has shrunk, but only to pre-COVID levels, after swelling to record levels last year. The City of Denver’s 2021 annual report on the marijuana industry details a record year for Colorado’s marijuana industry. Statewide, consumers bought $2.2 billion worth of medical and recreational cannabis, the bulk of which was recreational.

Marijuana sales have increased every year since Colorado allowed legal recreational pot to be sold starting in 2014. The COVID pandemic produced a large uptick in sales, similar to alcohol. Total sales shot up 25% in 2020 and peaked in 2021.

Sales have dipped in 2022, according to tax records from the Colorado Department of Revenue.

Through July 1, Colorado’s marijuana state tax revenue has slowed to levels unseen since March 2020. The state collected only $27.7 million worth of marijuana taxes and fees in June.

Still, state tax revenue is higher now than at any point before the pandemic. Tax intake has only slowed relative to the records set during the last two years.

Industry representatives have spoken of a slowdown in sales they say will compromise the public projects marijuana taxes support, including schools and social services. Prices are part of the issue. Colorado records say the current price per pound of marijuana…

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