Quick Cannabis Value Estimator
This calculator is for educational and legal budgeting use only. It does not provide buying/selling advice and should not be used for unlawful activity.
How this cannabis value calculator works
The calculator converts your selected quantity into grams, multiplies by your price-per-gram estimate, and then adds tax if you include one. That gives you a fast total value estimate.
While people often search for a “street value calculator,” real-world pricing is inconsistent and can vary widely by region, quality, legality, and product type. For that reason, this tool is intentionally simple and transparent: you control the price input.
Step-by-step usage
1) Enter quantity and unit
Type how many units you have (for example, 2 ounces or 3 eighths), then select the matching unit in the dropdown.
2) Add a price-per-gram estimate
Enter a dollar amount per gram. This can be based on legal retail data, average receipts, or your own budgeting assumptions.
3) Include tax (optional)
If you want a closer “out-the-door” estimate, add a tax percentage. Leave it at 0 if you only want subtotal value.
Common unit conversions
- 1 gram = 1g
- 1 eighth = 3.5g
- 1 quarter = 7g
- 1 half ounce = 14g
- 1 ounce = 28g
- 1 pound = 453.592g
Why “street value” estimates can be misleading
A single number can hide huge differences. Quality, freshness, cannabinoid profile, market access, and legal status all influence price. Two products with the same weight can carry very different value in practice.
- Quality tier: Premium flower and lower-grade material are priced differently.
- Market type: Regulated dispensary prices include compliance costs and taxes.
- Location: Urban and rural markets can diverge significantly.
- Timing: Seasonal supply shifts and promotions impact price.
Example calculation
Suppose you enter 2 ounces at $8.50 per gram with 10% tax. The calculator converts 2 ounces into 56 grams, computes a subtotal of $476.00, then adds $47.60 tax for a total of $523.60.
Important legal note
Cannabis laws vary by jurisdiction and can change frequently. Always follow local, state/provincial, and federal regulations. This page is informational and not legal or financial advice.