Ontario’s legal cannabis market is moving more product than ever, but selling it is becoming a losing game for many shop owners.
New data from the Ontario Cannabis Store’s 2024 By the Numbers report shows a record-breaking $2.15 billion in retail sales, an 11% increase from 2023, with nearly 409 million grams of tested flower and pre-rolls sold.
Yet behind that growth is a churn that has rattled the province’s once-booming dispensary scene.
In 2024, the OCS onboarded 234 new stores, a 15% drop from 2023, while offboarding 214, a 52% spike in closures. Toronto alone lost 43 dispensaries, an 11% decline in a city once considered the capital of Canada’s cannabis retail revolution.
“Cannabis dispensaries face the same economic pressures as other brick-and-mortar retailers, plus additional obstacles specific to our industry,” said Ayman Makawy, franchise owner of Spiritleaf Ancaster and long-time cannabis advocate. “No big banks want to work with us. That makes it nearly impossible to get small-business loans or even basic payroll software support that other businesses take for granted.”
Makawy says government programs that cushion other small businesses—grants, low-interest financing, tax credits—rarely extend to cannabis operators.
“That’s a huge disadvantage when economic headwinds hit,” he said.
Growth Without Winners
According to the OCS, Ontario ended 2024 with 1,720 authorized cannabis stores, up only six from the year before.It’s a stalled map: sales are climbing, but storefronts are flat or folding.
That contradiction mirrors earlier reporting from StratCann, which found 2023 sales near $1.94 billion (+12%) even as 142 stores closed, up from 114 in 2022. In the same period, new authorizations plunged from 497 to 276.
It’s a treadmill effect: lots of movement, little progress.
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While legitimate retailers wrestle with financing gaps and shrinking margins, the unregulated market continues to thrive in the background.
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Author: Javier Hasse / High Times