Whitney Economics says U.S. cannabis operators carried more than $3.8 billion in delinquent receivables at the end of 2023, projected to top $4.2 billion in 2024. California’s legislature has tried twice to mandate timely vendor payments. Both bills died. A public credit-scoring platform is now filling the gap.
The cannabis industry has a payment problem. According to Whitney Economics, U.S. cannabis operators carried more than $3.8 billion in delinquent receivables at the end of 2023, with projections topping $4.2 billion in 2024. That figure equals roughly 1.6 months of total legal U.S. cannabis retail revenue, sitting on the books across the supply chain.
A public credit-scoring platform now tracks which California operators have the lowest ratings.
A $3.8 billion problem
Whitney Economics, the leading economic research firm in the cannabis sector, published its 2023 U.S. Cannabis Delinquent Payments Report in early 2024 under a blunt title: “Cannabis Delinquencies: An Existential Threat to the U.S. Cannabis Industry.”
The survey findings landed hard. 57.3% of respondents said delinquent receivables have a greater impact on their business than 280E, the federal tax code provision that has long been the industry’s signature complaint. 44% said unpaid receivables are impacting their ability to service debt. 34% said it was impacting their ability to pay state or federal taxes. More than half of all delinquencies (56.3%) are over 45 days past due.
The vendor payment crisis, by the numbers
U.S. cannabis industry, per Whitney Economics’ 2023 Delinquent Payments Report.
$3.8B
Total delinquent receivables across the U.S. cannabis industry, year-end 2023
$4.2B
Projected delinquent receivables for 2024 without intervention
1.6 mo.
Of total U.S. cannabis retail revenue currently sitting on the books
57.3%
Of operators say unpaid receivables hurt their business more than 280E
Source: Whitney Economics, 2023 U.S. Cannabis Delinquent Payments Report (March 2024).
“The pressures created by current macroeconomic factors and regulatory policies have incentivized operators to stop paying their suppliers. Unless there is some form of federal and state regulatory intervention, the issues associated with the lack of payments will only get worse.”
Beau Whitney, founder and chief economist, Whitney Economics
One survey respondent put it more bluntly: “I would love to pay my bills, if others would simply pay me first so I could do so.”
Cultivators get stiffed first
Whitney’s data shows the crisis is concentrated upstream. Cultivators take the worst hit on accounts receivable. Retailers carry the lowest amount of delinquent A/R, because they collect from consumers in cash at the point of sale. They sit on what they owe upstream.
The result is a supply chain where operators at the top of the chain (growers, manufacturers, distributors, ancillary service providers) effectively finance the operations of those below them. Whitney’s report notes the impact is “disproportionately impacting smaller and minority owned businesses and in many cases is resulting in forced market consolidation and individual wealth destruction.”
California tried to legislate it. Twice.
California has the largest legal cannabis market in the country and one of the worst payment cultures. State lawmakers have tried twice to do something about it.
AB 766, introduced in 2023 by Assemblymember Phil Ting, would have required licensees to pay invoices of $5,000 or more within 15 days of the date set on the invoice. Unpaid invoices would have been reported to the Department of Cannabis Control, which could have issued warnings, citations or full disciplinary action. Licensees who failed to pay would have been prohibited from purchasing on credit until the invoice was settled.
AB 766 died in committee in early 2024.
A second attempt followed. AB 2888, introduced in 2024 by Assemblymember Phillip Chen, contained nearly identical language. It also did not advance.
So the state with the largest cannabis market in the country also has no enforceable framework requiring timely vendor payment. The 15-day rule, which would arguably have changed payment culture overnight, simply does not exist.
Where the list comes in
That regulatory vacuum is where Cannabis Credit Scores has positioned itself. The platform aggregates feedback from cannabis vendors and assigns operators a credit score based on payment behavior, dispute history and supplier reports. Operators with scores below 20 land on what CCS calls its “Shit List.”
CCS scores reflect aggregated vendor feedback. Low scores can stem from a range of underlying causes, including disputed invoices, financial distress, operational issues or alleged non-payment. The platform compiles and publishes the reports rather than adjudicating the underlying reasons.
More than 100 California operators currently appear on the list, per CCS data. Patterns worth noting:
- Concentration in Los Angeles, Riverside, Sacramento and Alameda counties
- Coverage across storefront retail, delivery, microbusiness and distribution licenses
- Multiple multi-location chains, signaling brand-level stress rather than isolated problem stores
- A significant share of listed operators carry credit scores at or near zero
CCS does not publish dollar amounts owed. It tracks the pattern and frequency of vendor reports. The list is updated continuously based on new submissions.
For cultivators, distributors and ancillary service providers, the platform functions as a vendor’s version of a credit bureau. Suppliers can check a buyer’s track record before extending net-30 or net-60 terms. For operators, a low score is a public signal that vendors should require cash up front.
The CCS list is, in effect, a private-sector workaround for the regulation California’s legislature couldn’t pass. The platform isn’t enforcing payment. It’s making credit performance public, in real time, across the largest cannabis market in the country.
See the list


