Cannabis Price Wars Are Training Shoppers to Stop Caring

Main Hemp Patriot
12 Min Read

The legal weed business taught customers to chase the next deal, and independent dispensaries are paying the price.

Twenty percent off flower. Buy two vapes, get the third for a penny. Thirty percent off the entire store until noon. Double loyalty points on Wednesday, unless Thursday’s sale turns out to be better. 

Cannabis retail has become a relentless hunt for the next markdown. In mature markets, falling cannabis prices have made legal weed dramatically more affordable for consumers. They have also left retailers fighting over shoppers who may have no reason to return once the coupon expires. 

Cortney Brown, Marketing Chair at the Cannabis Chamber of Commerce and CMO at cannabis advertising and analytics company MediaJel, believes retailers helped create the problem themselves. 

“I think we’ve trained them,” Brown told High Times. “Consumers love finding value, but they don’t wake up hoping to wait until Friday to buy cannabis. The industry created that behavior by teaching customers that if they wait another day, someone will inevitably offer a better deal.”

Photo courtesy of Maria Fernanda Pissioli via Unsplash

The Cannabis Price Wars Were Trained Into Existence

Price compression is not necessarily bad news for the person standing at the register. Lower prices can make legal cannabis accessible to people who were previously priced out, particularly in states where taxes and regulatory costs pushed dispensary weed far above traditional-market prices. 

The problem starts when lower base prices collide with a retail culture built around constant promotions. 

According to Headset’s analysis of cannabis retail margins, average U.S. gross margins fell from 52.6% in 2021 to approximately 42.7% during 2025. That decline has consequences beyond the sales floor. Less gross profit can mean tighter payroll, smaller purchasing budgets, late vendor payments, and less money available for expansion or product development. 

Brown traces the discount spiral to a familiar pattern. Supply increased, markets matured, and competition got nastier. Retailers pulled the fastest lever available. 

“Price compression is really the result of an industry-wide race to solve a long-term problem with short-term tactics,” she said. “Markets matured, supply increased, competition intensified, and retailers understandably reached for the fastest lever they had: discounting.” 

Promotions worked, at least initially. They moved inventory, boosted traffic, and gave customers a reason to choose one shop over another. Then every shop started speaking the same language. 

“The problem is that when every retailer follows the same playbook, discounting stops being a differentiator and becomes the expectation,” Brown said. “Eventually, the conversation shifted from ‘Why should I shop here?’ to ‘Who’s offering 30% off today?’” 

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Once that happens, the store is no longer selling selection, knowledge, trust, or identity. It is testing how much margin it can surrender before the customer walks across the street. 

Brown helped develop the Cannabis Price Wars initiative through a partnership between MediaJel and the Cannabis Chamber of Commerce after seeing retailers across the country face the same challenge: shrinking margins, increasing promotional pressure, and declining customer loyalty.

Rather than simply pointing out the problem, the Cannabis Chamber of Commerce has made it a priority to help operators navigate it. Through the Price Wars Campaign, the Chamber is providing free educational webinars, practical playbooks, industry discussions, and a 90-Day Discount Escape Plan designed to help retailers build healthier, more sustainable businesses. The initiative encourages operators to compete on customer experience, retention, and long-term value, not just deeper discounts.

The campaign does not argue that every sale is a mistake. Instead, the Price Wars Campaign encourages retailers to shift their focus from short-term discounts to long-term customer value by measuring profitability instead of revenue alone, personalizing offers instead of blanket promotions, strengthening loyalty through better customer experiences, and building brands customers choose for trust, education, and community, not simply because they’re the cheapest.

Promotions can clear aging inventory, introduce a new product, attract first-time shoppers, or turn a cannabis holiday into an actual event. Trouble arrives when the sale calendar becomes the entire marketing department. 

“Discounting becomes a problem the moment it starts replacing strategy,” Brown said. 

A Discount Can Rent a Customer, but It Cannot Buy Loyalty

Cannabis businesses tend to measure the immediate result of a promotion: traffic rose, units moved, and the daily sales total looked healthy. Those numbers do not necessarily show whether the shop made money or created a customer who will ever return. 

In a report examining millions of customers across more than 1,000 retailers in nine states, Headset found that two in three cannabis customers never return after their first visit. That retention gap suggests acquisition alone cannot carry a dispensary, no matter how packed the store looks on 4/20. 

“The biggest mistake is assuming discounts create loyalty,” Brown said. “Most discounts simply rent customers.” 

The distinction matters. A loyal customer chooses a store because it consistently delivers something they trust. A rented customer appears when the price drops and disappears when another dispensary offers an extra 5% off. 

Brown argues that retailers need to look past daily revenue and examine gross margin after discounts, repeat purchase rates, average order value, customer acquisition costs, and customer lifetime value. Those measurements show whether a promotion produced a worthwhile relationship or attracted a wave of bargain hunters. 

Retailers also burn money by offering the same deal to everybody. A regular customer who already visits twice a month may not need 30% off. Someone who has not returned in six months may need a thoughtful reminder. A first-time customer may respond better to patient service and credible product guidance than another automated text shouting about gummies. 

“Not every customer needs an incentive to buy,” Brown said. “Loyal customers may simply want recognition. Dormant customers need a reason to come back. First-time shoppers need trust.” 

Constant markdowns can also ripple back through the supply chain. When retailers sacrifice margin, brands face pressure to lower wholesale prices, fund promotions, or accept unfavorable payment terms. Cultivators, manufacturers, and small vendors absorb the squeeze. 

“Margins fund innovation,” Brown said. “When retailers and brands are constantly sacrificing margin, they have less to invest in, product development, staff education, merchandising, technology, marketing, and customer experience.” 

That is where the price war stops being a clever promotion and starts reshaping what reaches the shelf. 

Independent Dispensaries Cannot Outspend the Chains 

Large multistate operators can use scale, purchasing power, and vertical integration to survive prolonged price battles. An independent dispensary rarely has the same cushion.

Trying to beat a national operator by offering cheaper weed is therefore a fairly efficient way for a neighborhood shop to bleed out. As recent High Times reporting on small cannabis operators documented, lower prices and increasingly mature markets can produce a brutal environment for businesses without deep reserves. 

“Independent retailers shouldn’t try to out-discount national operators,” Brown said. “They should out-experience them.” 

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Experience can sound like empty retail jargon until it becomes concrete. It is the budtender who remembers that a customer hated the last disposable they bought. It is a menu curated by people who have actually tried the products. It is a local vendor pop-up, a patient education session, or a store that does not make a first-time shopper feel silly for asking a basic question. 

The broader point is not that every independent dispensary needs couches, events, or an aggressively quirky identity. It needs a reason to exist beyond proximity and price. 

The Cheapest Store Will Not Always Win 

Cannabis spent decades building communities outside conventional retail. People passed down genetics, shared cultivation knowledge, warned friends away from bad flower, and remembered the person who always came through with something special. 

Legalization brought testing, bright menus, rewards programs, and online ordering. Somewhere along the way, parts of the industry started treating the customer relationship like a coupon-delivery system. 

“Cannabis has always been about community,” Brown said. “Long before legalization, it was built around shared experiences, education, and connection. I think we’ve lost some of that in the race to compete on price.”

None of this means consumers should feel guilty for shopping within their budgets. Cheap weed is sometimes exactly what a person needs, and falling prices have created genuine benefits. The responsibility belongs to retailers that trained shoppers to believe full price is a sucker’s game and then acted surprised when loyalty vanished. 

A healthier market would leave room for fair prices without forcing every operator into permanent clearance mode. Promotions would serve a defined purpose. Staff knowledge, product curation, community relationships, and consistency would carry the rest of the weight. 

Brown hopes initiatives like the Price Wars Campaign encourage retailers to see that they don’t have to solve these challenges alone. Through the Cannabis Chamber of Commerce, the goal is to give operators practical resources, real-world education, and opportunities to learn from one another so they can build stronger businesses without relying on perpetual discounts. The campaign reflects the Chamber’s broader mission of strengthening the cannabis industry by supporting operators with actionable tools, not just commentary. 

“The cannabis industry doesn’t have a discount problem, it has a differentiation problem,” Brown said. “When every dispensary looks the same, price becomes the only thing left to compete on. The retailers that thrive over the next decade won’t be the cheapest. They’ll be the ones that create so much value that customers stop asking, ‘What’s on sale?’ and start asking, ‘When can I come back?’” 

The stores that survive may not be the ones sending the loudest 30%-off text every Friday morning. They will be the ones customers remember after the sale ends.

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