While Michigan’s overall cannabis market saw its first annual sales decline in 2025, one category kept growing — concentrates. Sales data from early 2026 shows concentrates up 23.2% year-over-year in Michigan, with inhalable compound concentrates surging 32.5% and vape cartridges continuing strong growth. In a market where operators are watching every dollar, concentrates are one of the few bright spots.
What Counts as a Concentrate
The concentrate category is broader than many consumers realize. It includes live rosin, live resin, distillate, wax, shatter, badder, sugar, diamonds, and vape cartridges — all cannabis products that have been processed beyond raw flower to extract and concentrate cannabinoids and terpenes. The production methods range from simple heat-and-pressure extraction (rosin) to complex hydrocarbon or CO2 extraction processes. The end products range wildly in quality, flavor, and intensity.
Why Live Rosin Is Leading the Quality Conversation
Among connoisseur-level consumers, live rosin has become the gold standard. Live rosin is made by pressing fresh-frozen cannabis flower — harvested and immediately frozen before drying — to extract a full-spectrum concentrate that preserves the original terpene profile. No solvents involved. Michigan’s live rosin market grew 8% in sales in 2025, with product availability up 11%. As Michigan grows more sophisticated consumer palates, live rosin is increasingly what people ask for.
Vape Cartridges: The Volume Driver
While live rosin leads on quality, vape cartridges are driving volume. They’re discreet, convenient, consistent, and easy to dose. The cartridge market has matured significantly — today’s Michigan-licensed vape products are subject to rigorous testing requirements and quality has improved dramatically. Distillate cartridges remain the most affordable option. Live resin and live rosin cartridges command a premium but have built a loyal following among consumers who prioritize flavor and full-spectrum effects.
Nanoemulsification: The Tech Behind Faster-Acting Products
One of the more interesting technological developments in Michigan’s concentrate and beverage market is nanoemulsification — a process that breaks cannabinoids into microscopic droplets that absorb into the bloodstream faster and more predictably than traditional oil-based delivery. This technology is behind a new generation of products that promise onset times of 10 to 15 minutes rather than the 45 to 90 minutes typical of traditional edibles. It’s changing consumer expectations around dosing and timing.
How to Navigate the Concentrate Section
If you’re newer to concentrates, the variety can be overwhelming. Here’s a simple framework: vape cartridges for ease and consistency; live resin for better flavor at a moderate price; live rosin for the best full-spectrum experience at a premium; traditional wax or shatter for high potency at a lower price point. Budtenders at House of Dank can walk you through what’s in stock and what’s worth the premium. Browse our concentrate menu online or find your nearest location.