Cloudy. Low 57F. Winds S at 10 to 15 mph..
Cloudy. Low 57F. Winds S at 10 to 15 mph.
Updated: April 21, 2026 @ 9:41 pm
The number of medical marijuana dispensaries operating in Oklahoma has declined sharply in the past two years, falling about 46% from its peak.
TULSA, Okla. — The number of medical marijuana dispensaries operating in Oklahoma has declined sharply in the past two years, falling about 46% from its peak.
State records show that in March 2023, Oklahoma had almost 2,900 licensed dispensaries. Today, that number is down to fewer than 1,600, according to the Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority (OMMA).
The decline marks a dramatic reversal from the early years of legalization. After voters approved medical marijuana in 2018, dispensaries opened at a rapid pace. In the first six months of 2019, Tulsa County alone saw 141 dispensaries. By 2023, that number had more than doubled to 310.
Industry experts say the downturn was expected.
“There were just too many of them,” longtime Tulsan John Hamill said in 2023. “They were going to weed themselves out by economics.”
Savannah Evans, who has worked in Oklahoma’s cannabis industry for four years, agreed. She points to two major factors: a state-imposed moratorium on new licenses and new rules requiring marijuana to be sold pre-packaged rather than “deli style” from bulk containers.
The moratorium, enacted in August 2022, halted the issuance of new dispensary licenses. It will remain in effect until at least Aug. 1, 2026, unless lawmakers extend it.
Evans said the pre-packaging rule, which took effect in June 2025, has also hurt small businesses by raising costs for packaging and labor.
“It’s really hitting people in the pockets,” Evans said.
When FOX23 asked OMMA why the dispensary numbers have decreased, OMMA Director of Communications Porsha Riley shared the following statement:
“Commercial licensing numbers have trended downward for several reasons, including the implementation of seed-to-sale tracking, which provides us with data to indicate who is operating legally and who is not. The moratorium, legal administrative actions, the implementation of new laws, license surrenders and market saturation have also contributed to the downturn.”
FOX23 also asked if OMMA intended to reduce the number of dispensaries. OMMA responded with the following statement:
“OMMA doesn’t pick winners and losers. We are neutral regulators who apply the law as written by lawmakers. Our role is to enforce the law fairly and consistently. The moratorium is in effect until August 1, 2026, unless lawmakers extend it.
Along with market forces, what we are seeing are the ebbs and flows that occur in most regulated industries, especially those that can’t engage in interstate commerce due to federal illegality.”
Despite the closures, Oklahoma’s medical marijuana program has generated significant tax revenue. Since sales began in 2019, the state has collected nearly $680 million in taxes. About $427 million of that comes from regular state and local sales taxes. Another $253 million has gone to fund programs such as substance abuse education.
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