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DENVER, CO - DECEMBER 27: Thomas Behler inputs a customer's information at Ganja Gourmet on December 27, 2013, in Denver, Colorado. The medical marijuana restaurant-dispensary offers a large variety of marijuana-infused edibles. Currently, Ganja Gourmet serves only those customers with medical marijuana licenses, but they intend to sell recreational-use edibles by February. (Photo by Anya Semenoff/The Denver Post)
DENVER, CO – DECEMBER 27: Thomas Behler inputs a customer’s information at Ganja Gourmet on December 27, 2013, in Denver, Colorado. The medical marijuana restaurant-dispensary offers a large variety of marijuana-infused edibles. Currently, Ganja Gourmet serves only those customers with medical marijuana licenses, but they intend to sell recreational-use edibles by February. (Photo by Anya Semenoff/The Denver Post)
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After taking a , Colorado marijuana sales and taxes held steady in November 2015, according to new data from the .

While the state’s December data and year-end totals won’t be available until mid-February, Colorado’s cannabis shops are already approaching the $900 million sales mark with this week’s new November numbers.

From October to November, recreational marijuana sales increased by 4 percent to $51 million as medical cannabis sales dipped more than 5 percent to $29.6 million, according to Cannabist calculations based on the state’s tax data.

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Colorado marijuana sales in 2015 with $59.2 million sold recreationally and $41.4 million sold medically. Legal marijuana observers say the fall months’ lower totals are the result of off-season tourism and an influx of post-harvest season cannabis making its way into the state either via legal, in-state home-growers or illegal cultivations in California and Oregon.

“Itap harvest season,” Cannabis Patients Alliance founder of the October sales drop. “I’d expect the sales numbers to fall in September and October.”

Nearly $700 million of medical and recreational marijuana was sold in Colorado in 2014. In 11 months of recorded data, the 2015 numbers have already passed last year’s mark, with nearly $895 million in sales.

There are three types of state taxes on recreational marijuana: the standard 2.9 percent sales tax; a 10 percent special marijuana sales tax; and a 15 percent excise tax on wholesale marijuana transfers. For November, Colorado collected $10.7 million in recreational taxes and fees and more than $1.5 million in medical taxes and fees, bringing the 2015 cumulative revenue total to more than $121 million.

Perhaps the most-watched figure in the state’s marijuana tax data is the 15 percent excise tax, which is earmarked for school construction projects. In November that tax brought in more than $3 million, up from $2.6 million in October. So far in 2015, those school-bound tax revenues have topped $31.4 million — besting that tax’s 2014 totals of $13.3 million.

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