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A new study by Clever Offers shows that home values in states where adult-use marijuana is legal have increased by $60,327 more on average between 2009 and 2024 compared to states where it remains criminalized. The report states that recreational cannabis states saw an average home value increase of $222,958, while non-legal states saw an average increase of $162,631. As of 2024, the average house in a legal marijuana state was worth $447,635, about 39% more than the average house price in non-recreational states. The study also found that states with only medical marijuana legalization saw greater home price increases ($22,185 more) than states where cannabis remains outlawed. While legalization is not the sole driver, tax revenue from legal cannabis is reinvested into public programs, making neighborhoods more desirable.

Houses In Legal Marijuana States Are Worth More And Grow In Value Faster Than Those Where Criminalization Remains, Study Shows

Jul 15, 2025

Ben Adlin

Marijuana Moment



Home values have been climbing across the country in recent decades, but a
new study finds that areas where adult-use marijuana is legal have seen
especially high returns. Between 2009 and 2024, it says, home values in
legal states increased by $60,327 more, on average, than home values in
jurisdictions that still criminalize the drug.

All told, says the report, from real estate platform Clever Offers, states
with recreational cannabis have seen average home values increase by
$222,958 since 2009, while states without adult-use marijuana have seen
average increases of $162,631.

As of 2024, the average house in a state with adult-use marijuana was worth
$447,635, the company’s analysis found—about 39 percent more than the
average house price of $320,904 in states without recreational cannabis.

Looking at the ten states with the greatest real estate price hikes since
2009, Clever Offers noted, all but one—Idaho—legalized marijuana during the
study period. Among the ten states with the lowest home value growth,
meanwhile, all but one—Illinois—kept recreational cannabis illegal.

[image: Home Value Growth in Recreational States vs. Non-Recreational
States From 2009 to 2024]

The findings suggest that some states could have seen even greater gains if
they’d legalized marijuana sooner. “Had Ohio, Minnesota, and Delaware—the
latest to legalize—done so when the first states, Colorado and Washington,
did,” a company press release says, “their projected home values could be
$96,890 higher on average today.”

While the new report focuses mostly on adult-use cannabis, it also found
that states where only medical marijuana is legal also saw greater
increases in home prices. Between 2009 and 2024, the average home value
increased by $22,185 more in medical marijuana states than in states where
cannabis remains outlawed for medical use.

[image: Home Value Growth in Medicinal States vs. Non-Medicinal States From
2009 to 2024]

To be clear, “legalization is not the sole driver of property values, but
it is a factor that is increasingly baked into the equation,” the report
says. “States that have given it the green light reap millions in tax
revenue that is reinvested into public programs that make neighborhoods
more desirable—and more valuable—to home buyers.”

States with the highest home value increases during the study period
included—in order—California, Hawaii, Washington State, Massachusetts and
Colorado. Those with the lowest returns were Louisiana, West Virginia,
Mississippi, Arkansas and Oklahoma.

Notably, while housing prices going up might benefit property owners, they
can also put homeownership increasingly out of reach. Many of the states
with the highest real estate increases, for instance, also boast some of
the nation’s largest populations of homeless people.

The new Clever Offers report follows similar analyses from the real estate
platform in past years. In 2023, for instance, Clever and others found that
the average price of a home in a legalization state was 41 percent higher
than those that still criminalize marijuana.

That earlier study explored average home prices from 2014 to 2023, looking
at the potential impact of regulated cannabis access for medical or
recreational purposes.

“It’s not surprising that states across the U.S. have seen significant
increases in property values, given that the value of real estate generally
increases over time,” that report said. “But the growing gap between home
values in legal and illegal states sticks out like a green thumb.”

Authors of the earlier study didn’t attempt to dissect the reasons why
legalization might be linked to increased home value, but multiple factors
could be at play. Previous studies have indicated that regulated access
could influence some people to move to certain states over others, for
example.

Prior analyses, including one published in 2021 that used data from online
real estate marketplace Zillow, have similarly shown that marijuana
legalization is associated with higher home property values. “Home values
increased $6,338 more in states where marijuana is legal in some form,
compared to states that haven’t legalized marijuana,” that report concluded.

In 2020, a separate analysis from economists at the University of Oklahoma
similarly found that states that legalize marijuana see a boost in housing
prices, with the effect most pronounced once nearby retail outlets open for
business.

*Photo courtesy of M a n u e l.*

The post Houses In Legal Marijuana States Are Worth More And Grow In Value
Faster Than Those Where Criminalization Remains, Study Shows appeared first
on Marijuana Moment.

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