Montana brought in $25,239,989 in legal marijuana sales in February, pushing the state’s total for the first two months of 2026 to $52,129,193.
That two-month total is above the $49,625,493 sold during the same period in 2025, when legal marijuana sales reached $25,914,159 in January and $23,711,334 in February. Through the end of February, 2026 sales are running about 5.1% ahead of where they were at the same point last year.
Of the $52,129,193 sold so far this year, $46,601,592 came from the adult-use market, with the remaining $5,527,601 coming from medical marijuana sales. In February alone, adult-use sales accounted for $22,584,852, compared to $2,655,136 in medical sales, again showing that the recreational market continues to make up the overwhelming majority of purchases in the state.
Montana’s legal marijuana market has now generated $1,326,049,728 in total sales since January 2022, underscoring just how quickly the industry has grown in just over four years.
County-level data for February shows Yellowstone County led the state with an estimated $4,302,766 in total sales. Gallatin County was second at $3,770,296, followed by Missoula County at $2,943,804, Flathead County at $2,376,540, and Cascade County at $1,794,647.
Montana’s $52,129,193 in legal marijuana sales through the first two months of 2026 has generated nearly $10 million in state marijuana taxes. Under state law, the adult-use market is taxed at 20%, with medical cannabis taxed at 4%. That estimate does not include any local-option marijuana taxes, which jurisdictions in Montana may add at rates of up to 3%.





