phoenixnewtimes.com PHOENIX NEW TIMES MAY 26TH– JUNE 1ST, 2022 State Licensed Dispensaries & Doctor Certifications | CANNABIS | Sin Tax City Pot raised more Arizona tax money than booze in 2021. BY MIKE MADRIAGA L ast year, Arizonans spent more money in sales tax on pot than booze, a new study shows. In 2021, adult-use cannabis excise taxes in Arizona reeled in $105 million, surpassing alcohol excise taxes of $92 million, according to an Institute of Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP) report. ITEP, a nonpartisan and nonprofit tax policy organization, added that since recreational cannabis legaliza- tion in certain states, such as Arizona in November 2020, “revenue has tended to start low but grow quickly as legal busi- nesses ramp up production and sales.” In January 2021, Arizona received $1.8 million in excise tax revenue; the following month, the Grand Canyon State collected $6.3 million. Only Arizona adult-use cannabis consumers, or recreational users, must pay a 16 percent tax on every purchase of marijuana and related products. Then there’s also the state’s 5.6 percent sales tax and addi- tional municipality taxes that vary by city and county, all bundled into a transaction privilege tax (TPT). “Being in the town of Guadalupe, we pay an additional 4 percent on top of the 5.6 percent state tax,” said Raul Molina, co-founder and COO of The Mint Cannabis. The Arizona Department of Revenue explains that TPT is “actually a tax on a vendor for the privilege of doing business in the state. Various business activities are subject to transaction privilege tax and must be licensed.” The TPT tax is then passed on to the recreational cannabis consumer who walks into Molina’s 12,000-square-foot dispensary. Molina continued, “At our dispensary, you will pay about 26 percent total in taxes as an adult-use cannabis purchaser.” But medical marijuana users are exempt from the 16 percent “sin tax” and only pay the TPT taxes, “which are state, county and municipality taxes at about 9 to 10 percent,” Molina added. Broken down: When anyone with a medical card walks into The Mint Cannabis at Baseline Road and Priest Drive and purchases $100 in cannabis product — the total cost will be about $110; if the customer does not have a medical card, their payment will be about $125. For an Arizona resident to get a medical marijuana card, the candidate must fill out a Medical Marijuana Program Qualifying Patient Checklist on the state’s Department of Health Services website. Then with the checklist, the candidate must provide an Arizona DHS medical marijuana certifica- tion form signed by a qualified physician stating the applicant has qualifying health conditions. There’s also a $150 patient registry fee, or $75 if the qualifying patient uses SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program). Demitri Downing, a 10-year cannabis industry veteran, and founder of Arizona’s Cannabis Industry Trade Association, doesn’t exactly agree with the two-tier cannabis user tax system in this state. “I think cannabis is a medicine and because it’s Mint Cannabis The Mint Cannabis at Baseline Road and Priest Drive. a medicine, it should have a 0 percent tax in my mind, because people need it,” he said. Downing, a former prosecutor based in Phoenix, forewarns that if the taxes are too high, “people will start their own black market and gray market outside of the governments’ control, and they’ll need to be punished.” Which will result in additional taxpayers’ monies to monitor, enforce, and process. From January 2021 through February 2022, Arizona has collected more than $261 million in combined taxes: $73 million was derived from medical mari- juana sales (TPT); $61 million from adult- use/recreational marijuana sales (TPT); and more than $127 million from excise taxes. “It shows what cannabis activists have been saying all along,” Molina concluded. “Tax is so everyone benefits — consumers or not.” 39