Cannabis Tax Revenues Outpace Other ‘Sin’ Taxes in Colorado

August 22, 2023 · Ganjapreneur

Cannabis tax revenues in Colorado are outpacing those of cigarettes, and other tobacco and nicotine products, and alcohol, according to an August 16 analysis from the Colorado Legislative Council Staff (LCS). In the 2022-2023 fiscal year, Colorado collected $282.3 million in cannabis tax revenue, compared to $233.9 million from cigarettes, $60.5 million from tobacco products, $56.4 million from nicotine products, and $56.1 million from alcohol. 

Adult-use cannabis sales in the state carry a 15% excise tax, 15% special sales tax, and 2.9% general sales tax; the general sales tax also applies to medical cannabis sales.  

Colorado cannabis taxes are used for a number of programs, including:  

  • $55.9 million for school construction; 
  • $52.4 million for school funding; 
  • $30.7 million for the general fund; 
  • $21.9 million got local governments; 
  • $16.6 million for substance use disorder services; 
  • $15.3 million for affordable housing construction grants and loans; 
  • $15 million for school health and professionals grant program;  
  • $6.1 million for mental health services;  
  • $4.4 million to combat the illicit market and for the state toxicology lab;  
  • $1.2 million for pesticide control; 
  • $1.1 million for a cannabis impaired driving awareness campaign;  
  • $1 million for school bullying prevention and education. 

Additionally, the revenues are distributed among state agencies including: 

  • $57.5 million for the Department of Human Services; 
  • $23.6 million for the Department of Public Health and Environment; 
  • $17.5 million for the Department of Local Affairs 
  • $11 million for the Department of Higher Education; 
  • $7.6 million for the Department of Public Safety; 
  • $14.1 million for “other,” which includes a number of smaller agencies.

The state has seen its cannabis-derived tax revenues from their fiscal year 2020-2021 peak of $425 million to $366 million in fiscal year 2021-2022 and $282 million in fiscal year 2022-2023. (Full Story)

In category:Business
Tags:
Next Post

California cities, counties cut marijuana taxes to aid struggling companies

An increasing number of county and local elected officials across California are acknowledging a longtime cannabis industry grievance – legal companies’ taxes are too high – and cutting local levies on retail sales, business operations or both. At least 14…
Read
Previous Post

Wall Street Loses Its Cannabis Buzz

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Wall Street was salivating at the cannabis industry. Seemingly every cannabis company was going public, whether it should or not. Investment bankers were happily signing big checks and crowing about the green rush. The requisite puns…
Read
Random Post

Snoop Dogg Announces He’s Quitting Smoking Pot

On Thursday, “Stoner of the Century” Snoop Dogg, 52, announced that he’s quitting smoking pot in a post that practically broke the internet. After trying weed in “the seventies” to smoking blunts and copious amounts of bud for a solid…
Read
Random Post

Nevada eases marijuana consumption lounge rules, issues first licenses

Nevada regulators this week approved loosening air-ventilation standards for marijuana consumption lounges in Las Vegas and other parts of the state while granting the first three conditional licenses for such venues. The Nevada Cannabis Compliance Board’s (CCB) actions provide more…
Read
Random Post

A 36-year-old CEO saw how psychedelics treated his best friend’s mental illness. Now his Peter Thiel-funded firm wants to bring the drugs to the masses

Florian Brand knows that there aren’t many people with his profile in biopharma. “You would probably consider me an outlier,” says the 36-year-old chief executive of Germany’s up-and-coming Atai Life Sciences. He doesn’t have a Ph.D. or any scientific background. His…
Read
Random Post

The Wisconsin Weed Dilemma - A Non-Legal State Surrounded By Legal Cannabis States

Surrounded By Legal Weed, Wisconsin Democrats Urge Change – Why Spend Money In Other States? Wisconsin residents face a dilemma since they live in a state that strictly enforces marijuana prohibition while surrounding areas reap the benefits of legalization. This…
Read