At 3:00 a.m. on October 3, 2025, Michigan’s Legislature passed a 24% wholesale tax on legal marijuana sales, without hearing a single second of testimony and just eight days after the bill’s language was made public (the tax is the subject of multiple other posts here on the Cannabis Law Blog). Unless blocked by the courts or repealed, the tax will take effect on January 1, 2026.

Litigation is inevitable, and we’re also hearing talk of efforts to find an alternative replacement tax, as well as talk of possible recalls to find replacement legislators. In light of that, here are some relevant numbers we’ve heard in talks with cannabis advocates (and verified):

  • In November of 2018, voters for the first time elected Gretchen Whitmer Governor, Senate Majority Leader Winnie Brinks to the State Senate, and Speaker Matt Hall to the State House of Representatives. That same election, Michigan voters passed the Michigan Regulation and Taxation of Marihuana Act (“MRTMA”), 56% to 44%. Since then:
  • FY 2024 tax revenues from MRTMA:
    • Marijuana excise taxes under MRTMA: $314,960,000
    • Excise taxes dedicated to roads funding: $116,000,000
    • Sales tax on adult use cannabis sales: $188,976,000
    • State’s “estimate” for annual wholesale tax revenue: $420,000,000
  • Estimated number of signatures required for recall petitions (amount required is based on in-district votes for governor in 2022, numbers below reflect votes for Senator or Representative and are therefore slightly lower than the actual threshold):
    • State Senator: average of 28,497 (lowest 15,905; highest 35,666)
    • State Representative: average of 9,795 (lowest 4,141; highest 13,948)

Our takeaways from these numbers? (1) There is not a lot of respect for what the cannabis industry has contributed to Michigan’s economy. (2) Whoever is doing the State’s revenue projections is high when it comes to estimating wholesale tax revenue, but believes that taxes from the industry will end up more than double the State’s receipts under MRTMA. (3) We have had extensive experience with recalls in Michigan, and in our view the chances that a recall attempt will be successful are extremely slim.

Clearly, this is only the beginning of the cannabis tax debacle in Michigan. Stay tuned to the Cannabis Law Blog for further updates.