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A Michigan judge ruled that the state's new 24% wholesale cannabis tax can proceed despite a lawsuit claiming it violates the voter-approved legalization law. The tax, which lawmakers approved to fund road construction and repairs, is set to take effect on January 1.

Michigan Court Upholds New Cannabis Wholesale Tax

Dec 10, 2025

Graham Abbott

Ganjapreneur



A Michigan State Court of Claims judge has ruled that the state’s new
cannabis tax provisions can proceed despite legal challenges raised by the
industry, WWMT reports.

Lawmakers approved the new 24% wholesale cannabis tax in October with the
governor’s support. The Michigan Cannabis Industry Association (MICIA)
later filed a lawsuit challenging the provision, which is set to take
effect on January 1. The plaintiffs argued that the tax violates the
state’s voter-approved cannabis legalization law because the 2018 policy —
which calls for a 10% excise tax on retail sales — can only be modified by
voters or a supermajority vote by lawmakers. Meanwhile, state attorneys
argued that the wholesale cannabis tax is distinct from the voter-approved
legalization policy and not a violation of the state’s Constitution.

In his Tuesday ruling, Court of Claims Judge Sima Patel rejected the
plaintiffs’ motions for a preliminary injunction, which would have
prevented the policy from taking effect.

“We don’t believe the court of claims made the right call. While we’re
deeply frustrated by this ruling, I can tell you this: the fight is far
from over.” — MICIA Spokesperson Rose Tantraphol,via WWMT

Lawmakers approved the wholesale cannabis tax to fund road construction and
repairs in the state.

Treasury officials said they are preparing to begin collecting the tax
starting next month, the report said.

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