Latest Retail Weed Recall Hits Over 30 Colorado Dispensaries
It’s the seventh recall issued for Colorado cannabis in 2026, and the eleventh in the last three months.
It’s the seventh recall issued for Colorado cannabis in 2026, and the eleventh in the last three months.
Outdoor cannabis accounts for a small slice of Colorado herb and costs about half the price of indoor, but both carry the same tax rate.
Relax or get after it, all with a little help from the plant.
According to a memo from state cannabis officials, operators have been caught diluting extractions that failed pesticide testing, among other shady moves.
All four notices were related to different products and contaminants, with the dates of sale ranging from November 2024 to January 2026.
The measure has a long way to go.
Both recalls list the same pesticide.
This is the first cannabis recall of the year, but it’s the eighth in just over two months.
Colorado doesn’t have many cannabis-friendly establishments, but Denver is home to a growing list, including a spa, several tour services and venues in popular neighborhoods.
Solid way to end the year.
Hard times breed bright minds and tenacious leaders, and Colorado’s cannabis space has plenty of those.
One Colorado company has already announced an online CBD marketplace for senior citizens.
“Colorado’s cannabis industry has been in a free-fall since 2021, and 2025 sales are trending down yet again, so operators here desperately need a lifeline.”
It’s been another hard year for the Colorado cannabis industry.
They’re the latest in a string of recent recalls from the state, which has issued sixteen so far in 2025.
Black Friday may be over, but the dispensary discounts continue.
It’s the state’s fourteenth recall of the year, and the third in three weeks.
You can still take a pre-dinner walk ‘n’ puff, but taking it slow will stoke the flames for seconds and reignite pumpkin pie passions.
In 2020, dispensaries sold almost $445 million from July to August. That’s a far cry from what they did this year.
A child of Denver, Bo Scaife is expanding his All Pro cannabis brand with a new store in the Valverde neighborhood.
The flagged products were sold from June to November of this year.
Colorado, long criticized for being too restrictive, suddenly looks less like an outlier and more like a preview of where the rest of the country is headed.