For years, getting into the cannabis industry was a high-stakes game reserved for the well-capitalized. Entrepreneurs shelled out millions for real estate, lawyers, and license applications thick enough to stop a door. Some waited months—or years—only to be denied a license altogether.
Now, the tables have turned. A new wave of cannabis businesses is hitting the market for prices that look more like single-family homes than multimillion-dollar ventures. In some states, you can buy a fully operational dispensary for less than $500,000.
“Right now [as of November 2025], we’ve got around 200 exclusive listings,” said Drew Mathews, CEO of Green Life Business, one of the industry’s largest cannabis brokerage firms. “The hottest markets are California, Nevada, Arizona, New Jersey, and New York. We’ve closed three or four deals in New York in the last ten days alone.”
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Even in smaller markets, the barriers to entry are coming down. “In Montana, where I live, it’s very affordable to buy into cannabis,” said Erica Sciati, a real estate and cannabis business broker. “You’ve got great staff who really know what they’re doing—whether it’s a grow, manufacturing, or dispensary—and it’s also just a tremendous place to live.”
Ben Rattner, a New York-based cannabis attorney, said many buyers are thinking strategically. “There are definitely founders out there who will move opportunistically to acquire underperforming dispensaries and will eventually rebrand them and bring a more cohesive experience to expand their footprint across whatever region.”
A New Kind of Buyer
According to Mathews, a record number of first-time buyers are entering the market. “We’ve seen the highest percentage of new buyers we’ve ever had in our ten years of business,” he said. “Roughly 25% to 30% of our transactions this year involved people purchasing their very first cannabis business.”
Most of the rest are small-market operators looking to expand their footprint store by store. And they’re not just bargain hunting—many see opportunity in turning struggling dispensaries into profitable ones.
Mathews said today’s buyers generally fall into four camps:
- The Flippers: Investors buying distressed assets, building them up, and reselling for a quick profit.
- The Believers: Those betting on federal rescheduling, convinced values will skyrocket when it happens.
- The Fixers: Operators confident they can bring struggling businesses back to life.
- The Hustlers: Industry veterans with the know-how but limited capital who partner with investors to make deals happen.
“There are fewer window shoppers now,” Mathews added. “The people calling us understand the process, they sign the NDAs, and they’re serious about closing.”
What’s Driving the Sell-Off
Low prices naturally raise eyebrows. Why would someone part with a cannabis license—a commodity once viewed as gold—for a fraction of what it cost to build?
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Green Life Business estimates that roughly 90% of current listings are either breaking even or losing money. Still, buyers are undeterred. The reasons behind the sales tend to fall into three familiar categories:
Founder fatigue: After years of battling red tape, market saturation, and price compression, many early entrants are simply burned out. In cannabis, one year feels like seven. A lot of owners just want their lives back.
Debt obligations: The cannabis boom was built on borrowed money, and now the bills are due. Some operators—especially those who borrowed heavily during the growth years—are selling to escape mounting debt.
Logistical headaches: Sometimes it’s not about failure, but geography. A store that once felt “close enough” to the home office can become a dreaded commute after years on the road.
Sciati said some owners are simply ready to move on. “A lot of people who got in early haven’t had a real vacation in twenty years,” she said. “They’re ready to retire and enjoy their grandkids.”
The Price of Entry
For buyers with a little patience and capital, the current market is full of surprises. These listings are from Green Life Business:
- $250,000 – Indio, California: Adult-use store on pace to do $1.5 million in 2025 revenue. The seller was motivated due to the distance from HQ.
- $129,000 – Ilwaco, Washington: Operational Tier 1 cultivation license with facilities included.
- $349,000 – Los Angeles, California: Retail dispensary and delivery business on track for $700,000 in 2025 sales.
Sciati said deals like these are especially attractive in Montana, where prices are among the lowest in the nation. “I recently helped a Utah family move here, establish residency, and buy a full vertical—manufacturing, grow, and dispensary—for $300,000 turnkey,” she said. “A basic dispensary license might run $100,000, and a grow-plus-dispensary package around $250,000. Add manufacturing, and you’re closer to $360,000. A great location can command up to four times EBITDA.”
Nationally, Cannabiz Media, which tracks cannabis licenses, data shows most cannabis M&A (merger and acquisition) deals still range between $1 million and $10 million—numbers that leave out many smaller investors. But as operators retrench and markets consolidate, bargains are popping up everywhere.
Mathews said the prices for cannabis companies have declined since the height of the market in 2018, when businesses sold at 3.5x gross revenue. “On profitable dispensaries, the going rate is in that 2x to 2.35x range, but otherwise we’re in that 0.25 to 0.33 range,” said Mathews. “In my opinion, if the new administration does not reschedule it anytime soon, I personally believe all cannabis businesses will be traded on simply EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) next year, because how far down can you go from where we were at 3.5 to, you know, we’re at the 0.25 range.”
The Path to Ownership
Buying an existing cannabis business comes with one big advantage: the hard work is already done. The location, licenses, and approvals are in place—the buyer just needs to get cleared by the state.
“Every state is a little different,” said Rattner. “There will be scrutiny, but like anything else in this space, it’s highly regulated yet completely doable. It just may take a little time.”
In some places, “a little time” means just a few weeks. In Montana, Sciati said transfers are often approved within one to two months—a blink of an eye compared to the years it can take to start from scratch.
The Bottom Line
After years of soaring valuations and vanishing margins, the cannabis market has entered a new phase—one where opportunity favors the patient, the savvy, and the slightly contrarian.
For would-be entrepreneurs, that means there’s never been a better moment to buy low, light up the spreadsheets, and get high on potential.


