>>Home
 >>Effects Of Marijuana
 >>Marijuana Facts
 >>Marijuana Harmful
 >>How Marijuana Used
 >>Gateway Drug
 >>Marijuana News
 >>Information
 >>Marijuana Laws
 >>Marijuana Prices
 >>Marijuana Use
 >>Marijuana Pictures
 >>Sings of Use
 >>Teens Marijuana
 >>Types Of Marijuana
 >>History Of Marijuana
 >>Marijuana Damage
 >>Data
 >>Drug Addiction
 >>Other Sites
 >>Contact Us

Links


 Group holds open house to curb drug use
LANCASTER -- October is Red Ribbon Month in Fairfield County and around the United States. ...
 Is Syracuse winning the war on drugs?
In 2003 City Auditor Minch Lewis released a report saying Syracuse's war on drugs was ...
 The cost of addiction
Saginaw County isn't Chicago and Prosecutor Mike Thomas says his office doesn't have a problem ...
 Marijuana Addiction is a Powerful Habit to Break
"They realized they were crossing the line, but didn't know how to stop; that's where ...
 Warren police uncover $1.2 million worth of marijuana
WARREN, Mich. (AP) -- A suspicious business owner and the police department's canine unit helped ...
 MARIJUANA Anonymous tip helps net $245,000 in marijuana from backyard garden
NASHPORT -- It was definitely one of the more unique places to find a marijuana ...

 

Marijuana Prices

During the early 1980s, prices for commercial grade marijuana ranged from $350 to $600 a pound. In the first six months of 1996, the absolute price for a pound of marijuana ranged from $200 to $4,000, though it typically sold for $800 a pound.

The cost of sinsemilla, the unpollinated flowering tops of the female plant with an inherently higher THC content, ranged from $1,000 to $2,000 per pound over a decade ago. Through mid-1996, the price ranged from $700 to $8,000 per pound, though the sale price typically did not fall below $1,300 per pound.
Prices per pound vary considerably, depending on consumer proximity to the Mexican Border and quantity purchased. From the mid-1990s to the present, prices for commercial-grade Mexican marijuana remained relatively stable.

On average, marijuana can be purchased in Mexico for approximately between $100 and $200 per kilogram. In DEA Field Divisions along the U.S. Southwest Border, Mexican marijuana sells for approximately between $400 and $1,000 per pound. In Border District Offices, the price is even lower; the McAllen, Texas, office reports wholesale prices of from $150 to $300 per pound.

In the Midwest and Northeast, the prices increase to, on average, between $700 and $2,000 per pound. Using low-end figures, 500 pounds of marijuana can be purchased in Juárez, Mexico, for $50,000 and sold in St. Louis, Missouri, for $400,000. As marijuana is purchased closer to the cultivation sites in Mexico and sold to U.S. consumers at greater distances from the U.S. Southwest Border, the profit margin increases significantly.

In 1998, Americans spent $66 billion on these drugs. $11 billion of it was on marijuana. Between 1989 and 1998, expenditure on marijuana increased slightly (as marijuana prices increased) then decreased slightly (as marijuana prices fell).

Prices of marijuana show wide variation by country of origin. Using wholesale prices per pound and mid-1991 prices, the price of marijuana of Mexican origin varied between $350 and $1600. For Colombian marijuana, this figure was $800 to $1,000 and for marijuana from Thailand, the price ranged from $2,000 to $3,000 per pound. Jamaican marijuana brought $1,500 to $2,000 per pound for commercial grade and $2,000-$3,000 for sinsemilla. It is estimated that United States consumers of marijuana spent $9 billion in 1990.

If you have a substance abuse problem and you are trying to find drug addiction treatment programs contact www.drug-rehabs.org