Maryland’s legal cannabis map could look a lot busier by autumn. The state’s top cannabis regulator says roughly 60 new licensed cannabis businesses could be open by this fall as conditional license winners work through zoning, financing and inspection hurdles. Most of that growth would stem from last year’s social‑equity licensing round and would broaden both retail and delivery choices across the state. Regulators say the goal is to pair steady expansion with safety while the market settles after its early surge.
According to the Baltimore Business Journal, Maryland Cannabis Administration Director Tabatha Robinson told lawmakers the agency is targeting about 60 openings by October as conditional licensees advance through corporate and facility reviews. Robinson also told the committee the statewide market generated roughly $1.17 billion in 2025 and that sales grew about 2.8% last year. Her comments came during a legislative briefing focused on licensing, testing and keeping the market stable rather than overheated.
Where the openings would come from
Most of the pending storefronts are expected to come from the social‑equity winners picked in last year’s licensing round. The Maryland Department of Commerce says more than 200 applicants were selected and that state grant programs will help with start‑up costs. The Commerce Department’s Cannabis Business Assistance Fund offers grants for buildout, equipment, employee training and other expenses intended to lower the capital barrier for small and minority‑owned operators.
Bottlenecks slowing the pipeline
Robinson told lawmakers that zoning disputes, lenders’ reluctance to back cannabis projects and the administrative work of corporate due‑diligence reviews are the chief reasons conditional approvals have not converted into open doors more quickly. Regulators have lengthened the conditional‑license window to give applicants more runway and to avoid rushed openings that could compromise compliance, Robinson said to the committee, as reported by the Baltimore Business Journal.
State fixes: funding, incubator and testing
To smooth the path, the Maryland Cannabis Administration has solicited a state‑run incubator that would let micro‑licensees share processing and secure storage and provide business training, while the Commerce fund provides targeted grants to help with buildout. The incubator plan and other technical‑assistance programs aim to give small operators lower‑cost access to equipment and space until they can move into their own facilities, per the Maryland Cannabis Administration…