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How Much Will a Legal Marijuana Habit Cost You?

Al Botross

Active member
ICMag Donor
Veteran
http://business.time.com/2013/05/20/how-much-will-a-legal-marijuana-habit-cost-you/


If you’re an average pot smoker in Colorado—paying average prices for average-quality marijuana—you can expect to spend around $650 on weed next year.
A study conducted by the Colorado Futures Center at Colorado State University aimed to get to the bottom of how much the state can expect to collect in tax revenues now that marijuana is legal. By doing a little extra math, we can get a rough estimate for what the average marijuana enthusiast will spend annually as well.
Researchers estimate that in 2014, 642,772 Colorado residents, or about 12.5% of the state population, will take advantage of pot’s newly legal status. Analysts assumed each person would smoke or otherwise “use” 3.53 ounces of marijuana annually, for a total of 2,268,985 ounces (about 142,000 pounds) per year.
All of these numbers may be underestimated, because they’re based on data compiled when recreational marijuana was illegal. In fact, there are so many unknowns in the realm of legal non-medicinal pot that all of this math has a crude back-of-the-napkin quality to it. In any event, using the study’s numbers, the average marijuana enthusiast can expect to pay a retail price of $185 per ounce next year. Multiply that times 3.53 ounces—which no one can buy at once, mind you, because there’s a one-ounce purchase maximum for residents—and the total comes to $653 annually spent on pot.
(MORE: This Exists: Medical Marijuana for Pets)
How much the individual actually winds up spending on marijuana will depend on several factors, most obviously the quality (and price) of the pot and how much one smokes. Researchers used the crowdsourcing site PriceofWeed.com to get the $185-per-ounce figure. As of early April, an ounce of marijuana was averaging $206 on the black market, and because the price is expected to drop once pot is legal, the study landed on $185. If the smoker is opting for higher-quality, $300-per-ounce marijuana, his annual pot bill would top $1,000. That’s for someone smoking the average of 3.53 ounces per year. A heavy smoker who goes with $300-per-ounce pot and uses, say, half-an-ounce monthly could expect to drop $1,800 annually on his habit.
That may sound like a lot. But a pot-smoking habit is probably cheaper than a cigarette-smoking habit. Colorado is one of the cheaper states for cigarettes, but a pack still goes for around $5.19, according to one state-by-state price check compilation. So a one-pack-per-day habit—purchased one pack at a time, not by the carton—comes to $1,894 for a year.
Health officials say that once medical expenses and things like lost productivity due to the effects of smoking are incorporated, an addiction to cigarettes is far more costly than that. For that matter, plenty of arguments have been made that legalizing marijuana will result in increased usage and addiction, as well as higher rates of driving while stoned, so the costs to society outweigh any benefits that arise from approving the drug for recreational use.
(MORE: No One Has to Work as Little as an American to Afford Beer)
Oh, and about the point of the Colorado State study, regarding tax revenues for the state? Researchers estimate that the 15% excise tax on wholesale marijuana would yield $21.7 million annually, which is far short of the $40 million annual target. To hit the target, marijuana would have to cost a lot more than the prices that have been estimated, or people in Colorado would have to buy a lot more marijuana than the forecasts project. Neither is likely to occur, the study states. “As competition forces growers and sellers to be more efficient, margins will erode and both wholesale cost and retail prices are forecast to fall,” the report reads. And instead of usage rising year after year, the study’s authors foresee a “decline in the rate of growth of consumption as the ‘wow’ factor erodes overtime and any marijuana tourism begins to decline, particularly if other states follow Colorado and Washington and legalize marijuana.”
 

MildeStoner

Well-known member
Veteran
Some very ill people consume vast amounts every day in the form of edibles/concentrates or edibles made from concentrates, which is sure to push the average up quite a lot too...
 

skullznroses

that aint nothing but 10 cent lovin
Veteran
Seriously you might as well add a %20 upscale since now that its all legal people will also buy other Cannabis products such as oils, bubble, edibles and the like.

Smoking cannabis will probably become a lower percentage of usage then it is right now, since people will have previously unavailable options.

A really interesting study would be a break down of how much you are paying for your weed on a lb per lb basis when you consider the initial amounts required to manufacture other various weed products like oil and edibles. i.e. whats a grower getting for her goods depending on how she sells her products.

plus any average data should include growers who pay only for supplies.
 

DTFuqua

Member
I wonder if any of the estimates consider that there will be a lot of drinkers that will quit and start/increase their pot use?
 

Crusader Rabbit

Active member
Veteran
I wonder if any of the estimates consider that there will be a lot of drinkers that will quit and start/increase their pot use?

[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]For that matter, plenty of arguments have been made that legalizing marijuana will result in increased usage and addiction, as well as higher rates of driving while stoned, so the costs to society outweigh any benefits that arise from approving the drug for recreational use.[/FONT]

I doubt it.
 

MIway

Registered User
Veteran
zip of high quality retail meds done in 8s to add variety... 400mo x 12... 4800yr... shit, thats a lot for someone that doesnt have a comfotable income.

i doubt most people could afford that, and it would be appx half of what i personally would use.
 
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