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East Coast vs. West Coast Weed Prices: LA vs. Massachusetts (2026)

West Coast Vs East Coast Weed Prices 2026
East Coast vs West Coast weed prices compared — Los Angeles vs Massachusetts cannabis costs East Coast vs West Coast weed prices compared — Los Angeles vs Massachusetts cannabis costs
June 25, 2026 • Cannabis Prices & Market

East Coast vs. West Coast Weed Prices: How LA and Massachusetts Really Stack Up

We pulled our own LA shelf prices and lined them up against a real Massachusetts dispensary. The answer surprised us.

By LAX Cannabis Club

The East Coast–West Coast rivalry runs deep, but we wanted to settle one corner of it with actual numbers: who really pays less for weed? We pulled our own Los Angeles shelf prices and lined them up against a well-regarded Massachusetts dispensary — Potency, a recreational shop out in Pittsfield — to see how a mature California market compares to one of the East Coast's original legal states. The answer surprised us.

The Headline: The Two Coasts Have Basically Converged

For years the assumption was simple: California is cheap, the East Coast is expensive. That's no longer true. Massachusetts prices have collapsed roughly 70% since the market launched, with the average ounce hitting record lows near $114 by the end of 2025 and budget flower now landing in the same range you'd see out west. California, meanwhile, has bottomed out around $62 an ounce on a wholesale-derived basis — the cheapest in the country — thanks to chronic oversupply.

~70%
MA price drop since launch
$114
Avg. MA ounce, late 2025
$62
CA ounce — cheapest in U.S.
So instead of a blowout, what we found was a near tie at the register, with each coast winning a few categories. Here's the breakdown.

Flower: Closer Than You'd Think (When You Compare Like for Like)

The trick with flower is to compare the same grade — shake and pre-ground trim are a different product than whole bud, and mixing them up makes any comparison meaningless. Here's the honest, grade-matched breakdown:

Flower type LAXCCLos Angeles · taxes in PotencyPittsfield, MA · pre-tax
Budget eighth 3.5g
$15.01
from $15deep $15–$20 selection
Top-shelf eighth 3.5g
$60–$80
$30–$50
Quarter 7g, value tier
from $29.99
from $16pre-ground
Shake rolling / cooking
from $25½oz, limited stock
from $207g
Value whole-flower ounce 28g
$100greenhouse, 24–27% THC
~$80lowest whole bud
Premium whole-flower ounce
~$110–$130indoor smalls / branded
$131–$175deli-style

Note: LAXCC prices are taxes-included; the Pittsfield prices are pre-tax — add roughly 17–20% MA tax to compare at the register.

Budget eighths start at the same place — $15 out east, $15.01 at LAXCC — but the Pittsfield shop stacks a deep roster of strains right at that $15 floor, with most of the value tier landing between $15 and $20. The bigger gap is at the top: its top-shelf eighths run $30–$50, while LA's premium and top-shelf flower sits at $60–$80 (THC Design, Kush Company, Cannabiotix). Even after adding MA tax, that high end comes in well under LA's. The same holds on quarters — the East Coast value 7g starts at $16 against roughly $30 for LA's cheapest quarter.

On shake (the trim used for rolling and cooking), the Pittsfield shop actually has the edge. Its shake starts at just $20 for 7 grams and runs a deep, consistently stocked lineup all the way up to $55–$60 for a full shake-trim ounce. LA shake tends to show up as occasional loss-leaders — Big Tree's runs about $25 a half-ounce when it's in stock, and it isn't always on the live menu. For a reliably available budget option, the East Coast shop is the deeper bench.

On whole-flower ounces, it's a near tie: LAXCC's $100 greenhouse ounce is full, tax-included bud at 24–27% THC, while the cheapest East Coast whole-bud ounce is around $80 before tax (roughly $95 out the door). Climb into premium and those deli-style ounces ($131–$175) run a bit higher than LA's indoor smalls and branded half-ounces — though that's partly the price of weigh-to-order, top-shelf flower.

Vapes, Pre-Rolls, and Edibles

The non-flower categories are a dead heat, which is the real headline once you pull the live menus.

Vape carts are nearly identical: about $14–$78 at LAXCC (taxes in) and $16–$70 in Pittsfield (pre-tax), with mainstream 1g carts clustering in the $20–$50 band on both coasts. Pre-rolls line up just as closely — singles from $5 in LA and $4 back east, with multipacks topping out around $60 either way.

Edibles surprised us most: they're essentially even. A 100mg gummy pack starts around $8 at both shops and climbs to roughly $30–$35 at the top, and LA's budget bench of single soft-gels and low-dose drinks even dips to $5. Whatever's in the cart — carts, joints, or gummies — the two menus land within a few dollars of each other before tax. You can see the full spread for yourself on their online menu.

Deals and Specials: Both Shops Go Hard

Neither store leans on shelf price alone — promotions are where the real savings live, and the two take opposite approaches.

Potency — Always-On "Deli Deals"

$10 eighth with a $50 spend
$1 pre-rolls & buy-2-save bundles on premium eighths and ounces
10% off when you grab 10+ eighths or 20+ joints
Multi-buy concentrates like Crude Boys 3 for $50, plus edible & disposable-vape multipacks
Standing "$20 or less" section stacked on top of a VIP newsletter program — value you can count on any day

LAXCC — Rotating Daily Drops

Fresh BOGO & buy-2-get-1 deals a new brand lineup for every day of the week
Everyday staples Big Pete's BOGO and a 710 Labs pod-and-battery offer
Headline $100 ounce & $25 shake
$0.01 new-member pre-roll plus a free points-based loyalty club
10% off for veterans

The bottom line: the Pittsfield shop rewards the everyday shopper with consistent standing discounts, while LAXCC rewards the deal-hunter who times a visit to the right day. Either way, checking the specials page before you go is the smart move — here's Potency's.

The Tax Twist (This Is the Real Story)

Here's the catch that shelf prices hide: taxes. Los Angeles stacks one of the heaviest cannabis tax burdens in the country — about 34.5% all-in once you combine the 15% state excise, state and district sales tax, and LA's local cannabis tax. Massachusetts caps out far lower, at roughly 17–20% depending on the town (10.75% excise, 6.25% sales, up to 3% local).

What that means at checkout

We list our menu prices taxes-included, so a $15 eighth on our shelf is genuinely $15 out the door. Massachusetts menus, including theirs, show pre-tax prices, so a $15 eighth there becomes roughly $18 at the register. Apples to apples, the two are within a few dollars — but a Massachusetts shopper does keep more of California's headline tax advantage from getting eaten back at checkout.

Why the Two Coasts Price So Differently

The convergence isn't a coincidence; it's two oversupplied markets meeting in the middle from opposite directions.

California has a structural glut. Outdoor wholesale flower has fallen to around $300 a pound, and an illicit market estimated at roughly 60% of all sales keeps constant downward pressure on legal prices. California is cheap because it has to be.

Massachusetts got there later and faster. As a higher-cost Northeast market with tighter licensing, prices stayed high for years — then cultivation capacity ballooned past 4.5 million square feet and wholesale flower crashed 60–70%. The pressure got so intense that regulators voted in 2026 to freeze new cultivation licenses to stabilize the sector. In short: California is permanently cheap by oversupply, and Massachusetts fell hard from a higher starting point and nearly caught up.

So Who Actually Wins?

Honestly? Both coasts win — it just depends on what's in your cart. The old stereotype that the East Coast can't match California on quality is flat-out wrong: the Pittsfield shop alone carries north of 151 brands, with a genuinely deep top-shelf bench and exotic indoor flower that goes toe-to-toe with anything out west. California has its own legendary craft roster, but this isn't a quality blowout in either direction — both menus are loaded.

On price, the two are remarkably close, with the East Coast right there or ahead in a few spots: its top-shelf eighths ($30–$50) undercut LA's ($60–$80), and its value quarters start at $16 against ~$30 in LA. Vapes, pre-rolls, and edibles run neck-and-neck — both shops start 100mg gummies around $8, pre-rolls around $4–$5, and carts in the teens. On whole-flower ounces it's essentially a draw once tax is factored in. The blowout most people expect — on price or on selection — simply isn't there anymore.

The bigger takeaway for shoppers anywhere: don't assume your coast is cheaper, and always check whether a menu price includes tax before you compare. A "$25 eighth" can mean very different things depending on which side of the country — and which shop — you're standing in. If you're ever out in the Berkshires, it's worth seeing how an East Coast menu stacks up against your local spot. The rivalry's still alive; the price gap mostly isn't.

Sources & Data Basis

See LA's Side of the Comparison

LAX Cannabis Club is a fully licensed dispensary near LAX with a $100 ounce, $25 shake, and fresh daily BOGO drops. Prices on our menu are taxes-included — the number you see is the number you pay. Open daily 9 AM – 9:30 PM.

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