For decades, thanks to anti-money laundering laws and the fear of banking funds from illicit activity, cannabis operators have been on the radar of every financial institution compliance team in the United States. As each state has authorized the sale of cannabis, there is a process that has to happen to educate the financial institutions that they can bank the cannabis industry and that there is guidance for them on just how to do that. It takes time to turn the ship around from avoiding cannabis-related businesses to welcoming them as customers.
There are state-legal, compliant cannabis businesses that need access to legitimate banking. It’s this change in perspective that’s holding them, and the greater cannabis community, back.
So what’s the solution? Legislation? It would help massively, for sure. But changing legislation takes years. A more short term solution is FinTech. FinTech is helping to legitimize the industry by giving CRBs access to banking, enabling compliance, and delivering the transparency regulators and FIs need to work with the industry. Essentially, FinTech is laying the foundation for cannabis to operate like any other industry, reframing it as a credible, compliant, and investible market.
We’re at a point in time where cannabis normalization is no longer just a cultural movement, it’s also a tech movement.
The Risk of Cannabis Banking
It’s important to distinguish between two types of risk in cannabis banking: FI-level risk and CRB-specific risk.
Before a FI can decide whether or not to bank cannabis businesses at all, it needs to assess the overall risk to its institution from participating in the industry. This means evaluating their own ability to manage and mitigate the unique risks that come with banking cannabis.
An FI needs to consider:
- Can we safely bring in high volumes of cash from cannabis-related deposits?
- Do we have the right tools and systems in place to monitor account activity in order to understand normal and expected behavior, or detect red flags?
- Are we prepared to file the required ongoing FinCEN reports on a quarterly basis, and for the additional volume of cash deposits?
- Can we clearly demonstrate to examiners and regulators that we’re only working with state-legal cannabis operators—not entities from the illicit market or those engaged in questionable practices?
Operational readiness and compliance infrastructure are critical for FIs working with this industry. Regulators will want to see that they’re not just taking on cannabis clients, but doing so responsibly and within the guidance provided by FinCEN.
From a strategy and business development perspective, it will be vital to the success of their program for financial institutions to understand the risk of the CRB market, considering:
- Whether the market in their footprint is growing, flat, or contracting?
- Is the licensing structure limited or is it open to anyone, and what is the cost of entry?
- How is the value of the license impacted by the structure and maturity of the market?
- What education is required to get up to speed on the dynamics of the local cannabis industry?
This is where many financial institutions hit a roadblock. They don’t have internal expertise in the cannabis space, and that’s understandable. It’s a relatively new and complex industry and one they’ve avoided until now. But it raises a key question: How can you get the expertise you need? Who can you partner with to fill those knowledge gaps?
Building Trust Through Data Transparency
It’s important to understand that banking is essential for the growth and long-term success of the cannabis industry as a whole. Financial institutions need access to reliable, transparent information in order to confidently bank cannabis businesses, and demonstrate that compliance to their examiners.
At the end of the day, financial institutions need data.
FinTech solutions are designed to centralize and simplify the process of managing cannabis-related financial data. This technology brings together key datasets like sales, deposits, and market insights into a single platform, allowing financial institutions to more effectively assess both FI-level risk and CRB-level risk, all in one place.
Without this technology, CRBs are left wrangling and sharing documents manually. That might mean relying on spreadsheets, trying to track down data from different sources, or figuring out how to connect with market experts or FIs partners on their own.
That’s where data steps in. And it plays a bigger role than most realize.
Data is foundational. It’s essential for:
- Assessing risk at both the FI and CRB level
- Demonstrating compliance to regulators and examiners
- Monitoring the performance and compliance of cannabis businesses
- Making informed decisions around pricing, portfolio management, and client selection
Ultimately, having access to the right data (and the tools to use it effectively) is what enables financial institutions to operate safely and confidently in the cannabis space. Without it, they’re flying blind in a high-risk environment.
There’s also a common misconception that once cannabis becomes federally legal, every bank will just open its doors and say, “Come on in.” But that’s not how it works. Even in legal industries like alcohol, gambling, or money services, you’re still dealing with high-risk categories because of things like large cash volumes and regulatory complexity.
As long as there’s an illicit cannabis market—where unregulated product continues to be sold—financial institutions will still need to exercise caution. Just like with any other high-risk sector, the focus remains on making sure you’re only working with legitimate, compliant businesses. And some financial institutions will always avoid high risk industries based on their own internal risk tolerances and resources.
FinTech as a Cannabis Normalization Tactic
An important factor to note is FinTech is actively solving structural barriers to banking in cannabis, not just lobbying for reform.
As the cannabis industry matures, its growth will be shaped not only by cultural acceptance or policy reform—but by the strength of the systems that support it. FinTech is at the heart of that transformation.
By aiding in financial institutions’ ability to transparently work with cannabis businesses, more FIs will begin working with cannabis businesses. This collaboration between big name FIs and CRBs will support the shifting perception of cannabis.
Once FIs get into the financials, understand the growth cycles, and interact directly with these operators, they see what’s really there: legitimate, professional, well-run, and often highly profitable businesses. It moves the narrative away from their outdated perceptions of what these businesses are and reframes cannabis as what it truly is—a serious, highly regulated industry with real economic impact and a strong consumer base.