The post Are Property Values Affected By Weed Legalization? appeared first on High Times.

Only a little over a year has passed since the heated 2016 elections. And the memory still hangs heavy like fuzzy smoke in a hot-boxed room. Yet, those monumental elections served Americans heaping helpings of both bad and good news. Four years with a chaotic new administration but also four states with newly legalized recreational bud. And also three more states with legal medical cannabis. Like these states, many others are currently examining the consequences of legalization in states like Colorado. After legalization, it experienced several hundred million dollars in tax revenue, funding scholarships for university-bound students. And even raising local property values.

A Growing Need For Housing

Utilizing data from Colorado’s pioneer model of cannabis legalization, the Wisconsin School of Business at the University of Wisconsin-Madison completed research indicating Denver property values have surged since Colorado’s legalization of recreational marijuana in January 2014. In their conclusions, if shacked up near a recreational cannabis dispensary within 0.1 miles, a single-family residence increased in value about 8.4%. This is compared to houses further away from a retail store after recreational marijuana sales became legal in 2014.

Continuing the positive vibes, since Colorado pot shops opened their doors to the public on January 1, 2014, median home prices in the state have jumped from $248,000 in the first half of 2014 to $298,000 in the first half of 2016, according to realtor.com. This surge could be attributed to the rising population of the mountain state. After all, there are hordes of transplants seek employment in the canna-industry. Still, housing demands continue to grow to accommodate out-of-staters looking to plant roots in Colorado. Whether they

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