Arizona Marijuana Taxes Top $50 Million So Far in 2026, With Sales Estimated at $223 Million

Arizona’s legal marijuana market has generated a combined $50,232,842 in taxes through the first two months of 2026, according to newly released state data, with total sales for January and February estimated at roughly $223 million.

The state brought in $24,980,585 in marijuana-related tax revenue in January, followed by $25,252,257 in February, according to the Department of Revenue. Together, that puts Arizona just over $50.2 million in marijuana tax collections so far this year, continuing a trend of strong revenue from one of the nation’s more established adult-use markets (monthly cannabis tax revenue hasn’t fallen below $20 million since October, 2021).

Based on those tax totals and Arizona’s marijuana tax structure, total legal marijuana sales are estimated at about $110.5 million in January and $112.8 million in February, for a combined total of roughly $223 million during the first two months of 2026. That includes both adult-use and medical marijuana purchases.

Arizona voters approved adult-use marijuana through Proposition 207 in November 2020, legalizing possession and sales for adults 21 and older. Retail sales began just two months later, in January 2021, giving the state one of the quickest transitions from voter approval to a functioning legal market.

Under Arizona law, adult-use marijuana purchases are subject to standard transaction privilege taxes in addition to a 16% excise tax. Medical marijuana sales remain taxed under a separate framework, resulting in a different revenue breakdown between the two markets.

With the latest numbers included, Arizona’s all-time marijuana tax revenue now stands at $1.37 billion.

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