Arkansas medical cannabis sales slip as governor hopefuls come out on legalization

The decline follows a record year in which sales totaled $291.1 million – the highest annual figure since sales began in 2019.
Published: July 17, 2026

After a record year, Arkansas’ medical cannabis sales fell in the first half of 2026, even as the state’s patient count climbed.

Meanwhile, both major party gubernatorial candidates are opposing adult-use marijuana legalization.

Arkansas medical marijuana sales in 2026 reached $140.3 million through June, down 2.6% from $144 million in the same period in 2025, according to the state Department of Finance and Administration.

Arkansas medical marijuana sales totaled $291.1 million in 2025, up 5.5% over 2024 and the highest annual figure since sales began in 2019.

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The Arkansas Department of Health reported 119,074 active patient cards in July, up 7.7% from 110,539 a year earlier.

What does the Arkansas medical marijuana market look like?

The state boasted 36 licensed dispensaries in the first half of 2026, down from 37 a year earlier, according to Talk Business & Politics.

State law caps the number of MMJ dispensaries in the state at 40. Secretary of Finance Jim Hudson has said he’s in no hurry to award the final medical marijuana licenses.

A Texarkana location holds a license but remains closed.

Five dispensaries drove the largest shares of statewide sales from January through June, according to the Department of Finance:

  • Natural Relief Dispensary (Sherwood): 8.55%
  • Suite 443 (Hot Springs): 8.02%
  • CROP Dispensary (Jonesboro): 5.33%
  • Harvest Dispensary (Conway): 5.32%
  • Custom Cannabis (Alexander): 4.43%

State tax revenue held flat at $16.8 million, matching the first half of 2025. The figure combines the 6.5% state sales tax and the 4% privilege tax on cultivator-to-dispensary sales, the Department of Finance reported.

Do Arkansas gubernatorial candidates support adult-use marijuana legalization

Despite MMJ’s success in Arkansas, neither major party candidate for governor supports recreational legalization, according to the Arkansas Advocate.

Sitting Republican Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who skipped a June debate and is favorited to win a second term, confirmed her opposition in an emailed statement.

“Giving more access to drugs, particularly recreational access, does nothing to help or benefit Arkansans,” Sanders wrote, according to the Advocate.

Sanders vetoed a bill that would have allowed drive-through windows at dispensaries last year. She also signed a bill into law heavily restricting hemp-derived THC.

Rather than trying to find separation from Sanders, the Democratic Party nominee, state Sen. Fred Love said he personally opposes legalization but would defer to voters.

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“I just don’t think that it is something I can support,” Love told the Advocate.

He said he would back adult-use if Arkansans approved it at the ballot box.

Arkansas voters rejected a recreational measure in 2022. Efforts to expand MMJ have also failed.

 

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