For the first time, 50% of Americans say they have tried marijuana at one point, according to this year’s Gallup annual Consumption Habits survey. The new high point shows a slight increase from last year’s 49% and 2021’s 48% results.
The latest figure is also statistically higher than the 45% results from Gallup’s 2017 and 2019 surveys, showing a growing trend.
A separate question in the survey showed that one in six Americans (17%) currently use marijuana, just one percent higher than last year’s results and a new high in the poll’s trend since 2003. That amount has more than doubled since 2013, where only 7% of Americans said they consume cannabis.
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“As marijuana has become more available to Americans and legal in an increasing number of states, their reports of use and experimentation have increased too,” the survey said. “Experimentation with marijuana among most subgroups is on par with the national average, but the rate of current use varies more — and is highest among young adults.”
Gallup conducted the findings from July 3-27. The analytics company said the longer trend of more Americans saying they have tried marijuana shows a sharp increase in experimentation in the first decade since the initial measure. From 1969 to 1977, the number rose from 4% to 24% and then another nine percentage points by 1985. Then the amount stayed under 40% until 2015.
Marijuana use statistics relating to age, gender and education
Gallup has previously shared that current cannabis use is most common with young adults, ages 18 to 34, representing 29%. Adults aged 35-54 represent 17% of current use and adults aged 55 and older make up 9%.
The difference between men and women using cannabis isn’t significant, according to Gallup. Meanwhile adults without a college degree are nearly twice as likely to smoke weed than college graduates. Only 12% of Republicans consume marijuana while 21% of…
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