Porterville Recorder

Does it make financial sense to keep your medical marijuana card after Jan. 1?

- By BRAD BRANAN

Starting New Year’s Day, adults no longer will need a doctor’s recommenda­tion to legally buy marijuana in California.

But don’t throw out that medical marijuana card just yet.

Depending on how much cannabis you consume, it might make sense to remain a medical marijuana customer instead of becoming a recreation­al one. Some medical consumers get a break on taxes, and all of them can buy more and stronger cannabis products than recreation­al customers.

Considerin­g just the costs, it pays to have a medical card if you buy a lot of marijuana and you have the right kind of recommenda­tion. To get a break on sales taxes – 8.25 percent in Sacramento – medical patients must have a state-issued medical card rather than the cards that are available from doctors.

Everyone pays other taxes, either directly or indirectly, including a 15 percent state excise tax and pot-specific local taxes (4 percent on gross sales in Sacramento).

State-issued cards must be obtained through county health department­s and cost significan­tly more than other doctor recommenda­tions. The card costs $100, or half that if you’re Medi-cal eligible.

If you consumed an ounce of weed each month at a cost of $160, the savings on sales tax would pay for the card and leave another $50 in your pocket each year.

A bigger considerat­ion for medical patients may be what the card allows you to buy. Any medical card will allow you to buy up to eight ounces of weed a day, compared to an ounce for recreation­al customers.

Any type of medical recommenda­tion allows users to purchase concentrat­ed forms of cannabis, such as oils or waxes, that are twice as strong as what is available to recreation­al consumers. The limit on THC, an active compound in cannabis, is 1,000 milligrams per package for recreation­al products and twice that for medical.

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