Filed Under: Revenue Over Reason

Michigan says it wants better roads. What it built instead is a toll booth for weed. On October 7, 2025, Governor Gretchen Whitmer signed a law creating a 24 percent wholesale tax on every transfer of cannabis from growers and processors to retailers. Lawmakers called it a funding fix. The cannabis industry called it a heist.
The new levy will take effect on January 1, 2026, and is projected to raise approximately $420 million annually for roads and infrastructure, according to Cannabis Business Times. State officials pitched it as common-sense budgeting. The Michigan Cannabis Industry Association (MiCIA) saw something else: a violation of the voter-approved Michigan Regulation and Taxation of Marihuana Act (MRTMA). Within twenty-four hours of Whitmer’s signature, the association filed a lawsuit in the Michigan Court of Claims, arguing the tax illegally alters a voter initiative without the required three-fourths legislative vote.
Industry insiders say the fight is about more than roads. It’s about whether elected officials can rewrite ballot measures behind closed doors. The tax was inserted into an eighty-one-billion-dollar budget deal negotiated under the threat of a government shutdown. Few lawmakers even saw the language before voting. Critics say it’s the kind of budget trick that keeps lobbyists happy and voters in the dark.
Paul Armentano, Deputy Director of NORML, confirmed to Pot Culture Magazine that his organization stands firmly against the increase.
“NORML opposes excessive taxation on cannabis consumers.”
“Raising taxes on adult use cannabis products will escalate prices out of reach for many consumers. This will drive a growing percentage of consumers to the unregulated market, thereby undermining the primary goal of legalization, which is to provide adults with safe, affordable, above-ground access to lab-tested products of known purity, potency, and quality.”
“This proposed tax increase will also likely hurt state-licensed businesses and their employees because it will increase their costs and reduce their customer base.”
Armentano said NORML helped generate over 3,000 communications to state lawmakers opposing the Michigan tax, and the group participated in multiple lobby days at the state capitol. They have taken similar positions in Maryland, Minnesota, and New Jersey, and successfully pushed back against a tax hike in California. To them, Michigan is another front in a national trend, states squeezing legal cannabis for cash under the banner of reform.
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Retailers across Michigan are already warning of consequences. Small operators say they will be forced to raise prices or shut down. One Detroit dispensary owner told local reporters his margins are already “razor thin.” Others in Grand Rapids and Marquette say customers will go back to their old sources once prices climb.
“Every time the state gets greedy, the street gets busy,” one grower said.
The state insists the tax will stabilize budgets without hurting consumers. Treasury officials say they will use existing distribution formulas to allocate revenue to schools, transportation, and local governments. But independent analysts predict the policy will inflate retail prices by as much as forty to fifty percent, once combined with Michigan’s existing ten percent excise tax and six percent sales tax. That means legal weed could soon carry one of the highest combined tax rates in the nation.
Rick Thompson, executive director of the Michigan Cannabis Industry Association, told reporters the law is “a direct violation of the Michigan Constitution.” He said his group expects the Court of Claims to rule quickly, and if the lawsuit fails, they will appeal to the Michigan Supreme Court.
Political fallout is already building. Republican leaders blame Democrats for sneaking the tax into the budget. Democrats say it was a bipartisan compromise. Michigan Advance called it a “war of words” that shows how both parties treat cannabis revenue as a slush fund with good optics.
For everyday consumers, the outcome is clear. Higher prices, fewer options, and a stronger underground market. For small businesses, it’s survival math. For lawmakers, it’s another revenue stream to pave their next campaign road.
Armentano’s warning cuts to the core of the issue.
“The goal of legalization is safe, affordable, above-ground access,” he said.
“When taxes make legal weed unaffordable, consumers return to the unregulated market.”
If the courts uphold this tax, it will send a message far beyond Michigan. It will tell every state that voter-approved cannabis laws can be rewritten with a signature. It will tell every grower that playing by the rules is optional for the government.
The new toll on cannabis is set. The only question now is whether the people who built Michigan’s cannabis economy will be forced to pay it, or fight it in court until it collapses under its own greed.
©2025 Pot Culture Magazine. All rights reserved. This content is the exclusive property of Pot Culture Magazine and may not be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without prior written permission from the publisher, except for brief quotations in critical reviews.
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