Top Headlines This Month
- βοΈ Appellate ruling requires written reasons for all retail denials
- πͺ Jersey City approves first two licensed consumption lounges
- π State FY2027 budget projects $106M in cannabis revenues
- ποΈ West New York cuts retail license cap from two to one
- ποΈ Paterson zoning reversal blocks state-approved dispensary
The New Jersey cannabis retail market is moving in multiple directions at once this March 2026. A binding appellate ruling changes how municipalities can reject retail applications, Jersey City approves its first licensed consumption lounges, and the state’s own budget projects $106 million in cannabis tax and fee revenues for FY2027. Meanwhile, West New York tightened its retail cap and Paterson’s zoning reversal left one state-approved dispensary stuck in limbo. There is a lot happening across the 565 municipalities, and the gap between licensed access and unmet demand remains one of the loudest signals in the market.
Plus, don’t miss out on the 3 dispensaries for sale at the bottom of this message.
βοΈ Statewide: Appellate Ruling Requires Written Basis for Retail Denials
The New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division issued a binding opinion in Higher Breed NJ LLC v. City of Burlington Common Council on March 3, 2026, holding that municipalities must provide a discernible written basis when denying local support for cannabis retail applications. The case stems from Burlington City Council’s May 14, 2024 denial of a retail application with no stated reason. The court vacated that denial and remanded the matter for reconsideration with a reviewable written resolution. Judge Lisa Perez Friscia wrote: βWhile the City Council was permitted to consider all relevant evidence and has wide discretion under its general police powers to deny the issuance of an ROS, we hold that the City Council has to provide a discernible reason for its determination.β The court also stated: βState law offers no exemption for municipalities from providing in an adopted resolution the basis for denying local support.β
This ruling sets a procedural standard across all New Jersey municipalities. Blanket or unexplained denials are now legally vulnerable to appeal, which raises the evidentiary bar for any council seeking to block a retail application. For the New Jersey cannabis retail market, this strengthens the position of applicants in jurisdictions that have historically used silence or vague resolutions as a soft rejection tool.
Source: njcourts.gov β Higher Breed NJ LLC v. City of Burlington Common Council
πͺ Jersey City: First Two Licensed Consumption Lounges Approved
The Jersey City Cannabis Control Board granted approvals for the first two licensed consumption lounges in Jersey City and Hudson County. The two locations are Xena Dispensary at 759a Bergen Ave. in Ward B and The Other Side Dispensary in the Heights neighborhood. This came through the March 2026 board cycle and marks a format expansion in one of New Jersey’s largest and most active cannabis retail markets. Jersey City has simultaneously been dealing with a major multi-agency enforcement sweep of illegal smoke shops conducted with DEA assistance, targeting organized unlicensed networks rather than isolated storefronts. A separate Class 5 retail application from Warrior Weed LLC was also denied by the City Council in late February 2026 after 216 residents and stakeholders submitted documented opposition.
Jersey City is shaping up as one of the most complex cannabis retail environments in the state. Consumption lounges introduce a new revenue format beyond traditional dispensary sales, while active enforcement signals a shift toward protecting the licensed market from illicit competition. The community pushback that killed the Warrior Weed application shows that political scrutiny remains high for new entrants even in an opt-in market.
Source: mmjdaily.com β Jersey City Cannabis Control Board Grants Approval for First 2 Consumption Lounges
π Statewide: FY2027 Budget Projects $106M in New Jersey Cannabis Revenue
The New Jersey Office of Management and Budget published its FY2027 Budget in Brief on March 11, 2026, projecting $106 million in cannabis tax and fee revenues for the fiscal year. The document also reports that nearly 400 licensed cannabis businesses are now operating across more than 200 municipalities statewide. Of that projected revenue, $25.5 million is allocated to hospital-based and community-based violence intervention programs. This is the most recent official read on New Jersey cannabis retail market scale, and it comes directly from the state’s own budget planning documents.
The 400-business, 200-municipality footprint means there is still meaningful geographic whitespace across the state’s 565 municipalities. The $106M revenue projection signals that cannabis has become a reliable fiscal line item for New Jersey, which increases the likelihood of continued regulatory support at the state level. Markets where licensed access remains absent continue to represent the clearest entry points for retail expansion in the New Jersey cannabis market.
Source: nj.gov β FY2027 Budget in Brief
ποΈ West New York: Retail License Cap Cut From Two to One
West New York’s Board of Commissioners advanced Ordinance 6/26 in late February 2026, with a public hearing held March 4, 2026. The ordinance amends Section 414-113 of the town code to reduce the maximum number of cannabis retailers permitted within the Cannabis Retail Overlay Zone from two to one. First reading was adopted and the ordinance was ordered published before the hearing. The ordinance takes effect upon passage and publication as required by law. West New York is in Hudson County, one of New Jersey’s most densely populated areas.
This cap reduction tightens the total number of retail licenses available in West New York, effectively cutting the town’s licensed retail capacity by half. In a county already seeing elevated scrutiny through Jersey City’s denial activity and zoning battles, West New York’s cap cut signals that some Hudson County municipalities are pulling back on retail density rather than expanding it.
Source: westnewyorknj.org β Ordinance 6/26: Cannabis Retail Overlay Zone
ποΈ Paterson: Zoning Reversal Blocks State-Approved Dispensary
A Paterson dispensary called Blaze Green remains closed despite holding state approval after the municipal zoning officer reversed an earlier favorable determination. The applicant invested over $200,000 to build out the former Riverside Manor site before the zoning interpretation changed. The owner has cited fear of bankruptcy as the business sits in operational limbo. The reversal appears tied to conflicting interpretations of the local code rather than any new ordinance or council vote. As of March 2, 2026, no resolution, appeal outcome, or revised zoning decision had been published.
The Paterson situation illustrates a specific risk in New Jersey cannabis retail: state-level approval does not guarantee a clear path at the municipal level when local zoning interpretations are unstable. The Higher Breed appellate ruling addresses denial transparency for ROS decisions, but a mid-stream zoning reversal by a zoning officer falls into a different procedural category. This case is one to watch for how municipalities and applicants resolve conflicts between prior determinations and later reversals.
Source: northjersey.com β Paterson NJ Cannabis Dispensary Blaze Green Not Open
πΌ New Jersey Dispensaries For Sale
Absecon, NJ β Dispensary
Ask Price: $500,000
- Located on the main road between Atlantic City and the airport
- 3,000 sq ft with 11 parking spaces plus ample street parking
- Traffic count of approximately 25,000
- One of only three licensed retail stores in the municipality
- Lease rate of $9,000 NNN or building available for purchase at market rate
- On pace to generate $1M in gross revenue in first 12 months
Hudson County β Operational Dispensary
Ask Price: $2.8M
- Operational for one year
- Generated $2.8M in revenue in 2025, with a projected $5.4M run rate for 2026
- Prime location on the busiest street in the municipality
- Surrounded by towns that have opted out
- Only operational dispensary permitted in the town
- 9,000 sq ft building with $20,000/month lease
South Jersey β Operational Dispensary
Ask Price: $800,000 (business and lease) or $1.25M (business and real estate)
- Opened in 2023
- Consistent gross revenue exceeding $1.5M annually
- Net income of $1.1M+ over the past 12 months
- Real estate available for purchase or lease
Interested in learning more about these New Jersey dispensary opportunities? Contact us directly to get more details.
The Bottom Line
New Jersey cannabis retail in March 2026 is defined by a widening gap between state-level progress and local-level friction. The appellate ruling gives applicants a stronger procedural tool against arbitrary municipal denials, the FY2027 budget confirms $106M in projected revenues and nearly 400 active businesses, and Jersey City’s first consumption lounges mark a format milestone. At the same time, West New York is cutting its retail cap, Paterson’s Blaze Green is blocked by a zoning reversal, and Hudson County communities continue to push back on new applications. The New Jersey cannabis market is maturing, but the municipal layer remains the most variable risk factor for anyone expanding across this state.
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