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California senators have approved a bill to pause a newly enacted marijuana tax hike for five years. The bill, AB 564, aims to provide tax relief to California's cannabis industry, which is struggling to compete with the illegal market. The tax increase, from 15 percent to 19 percent, officially took effect last week. Governor Gavin Newsom and Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas supported a tax freeze, but Senate President Pro Tempore Mike McGuire reportedly blocked it from the budget legislation due to concerns about budget shortfalls. Haney's bill would require the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration to adjust the cannabis excise tax rate to generate an equivalent amount of revenue as the previous fiscal year. California officials are also inviting research proposals for grants to educate the public on marijuana law and recently announced over $52 million in community reinvestment grants funded by marijuana tax revenue.

California Senators Approve Bill To Pause Newly Enacted Marijuana Tax Hike For Five Years

Jul 10, 2025

Kyle Jaeger

Marijuana Moment



California senators have advanced a bill to put a pause on a newly enacted
take hike on marijuana products.

On Wednesday, members of the Senate Revenue And Taxation Committee approved
the Assembly-passed measure from Assemblymember Matt Haney (D) that would
delay the tax increase by five years. The vote was 5-0.

However, the sponsor said at the beginning of the hearing that he approved
of a committee amendment that would make it so the effective date of his
legislation would be in October, rather than immediately. The tax hike
itself officially took effect last week.

State officials announced last month that the cannabis excise tax rate
would increase from 15 percent to 19 percent on July 1, and advocates held
out hope that pending budget legislation would be amended to mirror Haney’s
standalone bill. That didn’t come to fruition.

“AB 564 will provide tax relief to California’s struggling cannabis
industry by reversing an unprecedented 25 percent excise tax increase,”
Haney said during the Senate committee hearing on Wednesday. “California
has been at the heart of America’s cannabis economy and culture—but since
voters passed Prop 64, California has not given the legal cannabis industry
a chance to grow into its potential.”

“The legal cannabis industry, which is subject to state and local taxes and
fees, is constantly at a threat of being overtaken by illegal and untaxed
industry,” he said. “The legal cannabis industry needs a lifeline to
stabilize.”

The passage of an earlier budget bill that Haney’s measure responds to came
despite Gov. Gavin Newsom’s (D) support for including a tax freeze in the
trailer bill. Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas (D) also backed the delay, but Senate
President Pro Tempore Mike McGuire (D) reportedly blocked it from the
budget legislation.

In a statement to CalMatters, McGuire acknowledged that “taxes on
California’s overregulated cannabis industry have been a train wreck for
years,” but he said that :any freeze will create a budget shortfall which
would impact critical community programs funded by cannabis tax dollars.”

Under Haney’s bill, which advanced through the Assembly last month, the
delayed implementation wouldn’t take effect until October. Advocates wanted
to see it included in the separate, newly enacted budget legislation
because it would’ve taken effect upon enactment.

Haney’s proposal would make it so the California Department of Tax and Fee
Administration (CDTFA), working with the Department of Finance, would be
required to “adjust the cannabis excise tax rate upon purchasers of
cannabis or cannabis products” based on the “additional percentage of the
gross receipts of any retail sale by a cannabis retailer that the
department estimates will generate an amount of revenue equivalent to the
amount that would have been collected in the previous fiscal year,” the text
says.

The department would need to “estimate the amount of revenue that would
have been collected in the previous fiscal year pursuant to the
weight-based cultivation tax” and “estimate this amount by projecting the
revenue from weight-based cultivation taxes that would have been collected
in the previous calendar year based on information available to the
department.”

“The specific goal of the cannabis excise tax rate reduction is to provide
immediate tax relief to the cannabis industry,” the measure states. “The
efficacy of this goal may be measured by the Legislature by the amount of
gain or loss in cannabis excise tax revenues resulting from the cannabis
excise tax rate reduction allowed by this act.”

It also mandates that CDTFA, on or before December 1, 2026 and each
subsequent year the California “submit a report to the
Legislature…detailing the amount of gain or loss in cannabis excise tax
revenues resulting from the cannabis excise tax rate reduction allowed by
this act.”


*— Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug
policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon
supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps,
charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.*


*Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on
Patreon to get access. —*

Meanwhile, California officials are inviting research proposals for a
second round of grants under a program meant to better educate the public
on the state’s marijuana law and help policymakers make informed decisions
on the issue.

Last month, the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development
(GO-Biz) announced the recipients of over $52 million in community
reinvestment grants to nonprofits and local health departments, also funded
by marijuana tax revenue.

That marked the seventh round of cannabis-funded California Community
Reinvestment Grants (CalCRG) under the state program.

Legalization in California has created a number of new grant programs aimed
at addressing the consequences of marijuana prohibition and attempting to
nurture a strong, well-regulated legal industry.

California’s Supreme Court separately delivered a victory for the state’s
marijuana program last month, rescinding a lower court ruling in a case
that suggested federal prohibition could be used locally to undermine the
cannabis market.

The state Supreme Court ruling also came just weeks after California
officials unveiled a report on the current status and future of the state’s
marijuana market—with independent analysts hired by regulators concluding
that the federal prohibition on cannabis that prevents interstate commerce
is meaningfully bolstering the illicit market.

The governor did sign a bill in 2022 that would have empowered him to enter
into interstate cannabis commerce agreements with other legal states, but
that power was incumbent upon federal guidance or an assessment from the
state attorney general that sanctioned such activity.

Meanwhile, a California Senate committee recently declined to advance a
bipartisan bill that would have created a psilocybin pilot program for
military veterans and former first responders.

*Photo courtesy of Mike Latimer.*

The post California Senators Approve Bill To Pause Newly Enacted Marijuana
Tax Hike For Five Years appeared first on Marijuana Moment.

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