Gavin Newsom’s Budget Keeps Cannabis Tax Hike: Can It Be Stopped? What’s Next For Operators?

California’s cannabis industry was dealt a serious blow this week as Gov. Gavin Newsom’s revised state budget confirmed the scheduled increase in the cannabis excise tax from 15% to 19%, effective July 1. The change, originally triggered by Assembly Bill 195 in 2022, will move forward despite calls from industry leaders and lawmakers to delay or freeze the hike amid ongoing market contraction and widespread business closures.

‘A More Than 25% Tax Increase’ On A Declining Market

The California Cannabis Operators Association (CaCOA), which represents over 300 licensed businesses across the state, warned the increase could be catastrophic.

“California’s legal cannabis industry cannot withstand a more than 25% tax increase when sales have already declined by 19% and thousands of businesses have closed their doors,” said Amy O’Gorman Jenkins, executive director of CaCOA. “Raising taxes on a struggling industry—especially one already undercut by untaxed, unregulated operators—defies economic sense and contradicts Proposition 64’s core intent.”

The tax bump stems from a 2022 policy change that eliminated California’s cannabis cultivation tax and shifted revenue collection downstream to retail. Under that law, the excise tax rate was set to adjust based on revenue trends and the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration (CDTFA) …

Full story available on Benzinga.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *