New Mexico Cannabis Market Report — Q1 2026
TL;DR: New Mexico has 2,242 brands competing across 384 tracked dispensaries (5.8 brands per shelf slot). Wyld leads with 214 stores (55.7% coverage). Full brand rankings, city breakdowns, and competitive analysis below.
Market Overview
New Mexico’s cannabis shelves told an interesting story in Q1 2026. Based on CannaiQ’s continuous monitoring of dispensary menus across the state, New Mexico stands as a rapidly developing cannabis market with increasing competition — and the data shows why.
CannaiQ tracks product menus at 384 dispensaries across New Mexico, refreshing data hourly. In Q1 2026, those menus collectively feature 2,242 distinct brands — resulting in an average of 5.8 brands per dispensary. That ratio tells a story about market competitiveness: there is healthy competition without being overwhelming, giving both established and emerging brands room to compete.
New Mexico’s 384 tracked dispensaries form a market large enough to support meaningful competition but concentrated enough that individual store wins still move the needle on statewide coverage. Brands entering New Mexico should target quality over quantity — getting into the right 30-40 stores often matters more than blanket distribution.
Key Metrics at a Glance
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Dispensaries tracked | 384 |
| Brands with active SKUs | 2,242 |
| Brands per dispensary | 5.8 |
| Data refresh rate | Hourly |
| Coverage | United States |
Top Brands by Shelf Presence
The table below ranks New Mexico’s top brands by the number of dispensaries where they currently hold at least one active SKU. Coverage percentage is calculated against the 384-dispensary monitored universe.
| # | Brand | Stores | Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Wyld | 214 | 55.7% |
| 2 | Dime Industries | 201 | 52.3% |
| 3 | Wyld CBD | 160 | 41.7% |
| 4 | Wana | 160 | 41.7% |
| 5 | ELEVATED | 130 | 33.9% |
| 6 | Smokiez Edibles | 98 | 25.5% |
| 7 | THE BLOOM BRAND | 96 | 25.0% |
| 8 | GHOST. | 92 | 24.0% |
| 9 | OLIO | 86 | 22.4% |
| 10 | CHEEBA CHEWS | 82 | 21.4% |
What the Rankings Tell Us
Wyld holds the top position in New Mexico with shelf presence in 214 dispensaries — 55.7% of the monitored market. This gives the brand meaningful visibility without full market saturation, suggesting room for continued expansion.
Wyld holds a meaningful lead over Dime Industries and Wyld CBD, with 54 more store placements than the third-ranked brand. That kind of gap typically reflects either earlier market entry, stronger distributor relationships, or a product portfolio that resonates across multiple store formats.
The mid-tier brands (ranked 4-7) occupy an interesting position. Wana, ELEVATED, Smokiez Edibles, THE BLOOM BRAND each maintain presence in 96-160 stores — enough to matter, but not enough to dominate. For these brands, the Q2 playbook should focus on deepening penetration in existing accounts while selectively targeting stores where their top competitors have weak spots.
Brands in the 8-10 range — GHOST., OLIO, CHEEBA CHEWS — face the classic challenger’s dilemma: enough presence to show viability, but not enough to command consistent shelf allocation. The data suggests these brands should focus on category leadership (becoming the go-to in concentrates or edibles, for example) rather than trying to match the top brands on breadth alone.
Market Concentration and Competitive Dynamics
Understanding how distribution is concentrated among top brands reveals a lot about a market’s maturity and how accessible it is for new entrants.
In New Mexico, the top 5 brands account for 225% of total store placements (counting overlap — a store carrying all 5 would count 5 times). The relatively even spread across the top 5 indicates a competitive market where no single brand has locked up distribution.
For brands evaluating New Mexico as an expansion target, these dynamics matter. A growing market like this offers real opportunity for brands that can move quickly and build retail relationships before the market consolidates.
Regional Breakdown: Top Cities
Cannabis retail is never evenly distributed across a state. Here is where dispensary activity is concentrated in New Mexico:
| City | Dispensaries |
|---|---|
| Albuquerque | 82 |
| Santa Fe | 20 |
| Sunland Park | 13 |
| Las Cruces | 12 |
| Farmington | 11 |
Albuquerque leads with 82 dispensaries, representing 21% of the state total. Santa Fe follows with 20 locations. The concentration pattern matters for brands: achieving strong coverage in Albuquerque and Santa Fe alone can meaningfully boost statewide numbers.
For brands running field marketing or in-store promotions, these city-level numbers help prioritize where boots-on-the-ground efforts will generate the most coverage impact per visit.
Brand Distribution Patterns
Understanding how brands distribute across New Mexico reveals strategic patterns that raw rankings alone miss.
The top brand, Wyld, maintains presence in 214 stores. If we look at the drop-off from #1 to #5 (ELEVATED at 130 stores), the gap of 84 stores represents what it takes to move from “competitive” to “dominant” in New Mexico. That is not a trivial gap — it often reflects years of relationship building, established distributor networks, or the advantage of being a multi-state operator with brand recognition that precedes market entry.
Another useful lens: the concentration ratio. The top 3 brands in New Mexico (Wyld, Dime Industries, Wyld CBD) collectively hold 575 store placements. Compare that to the remaining 7 ranked brands at 744 placements. This relatively balanced distribution suggests the competitive hierarchy is still being established — and there is real opportunity for mid-tier brands to climb.
For retailers, this data offers a different perspective. If Wyld appears on 55.7% of menus in New Mexico, carrying it is table stakes — not a differentiator. Retailers looking to stand out should look at brands ranked 5-10 for exclusive or early-access partnerships that give their store a unique assortment.
Shelf Strategy: Lessons from the Data
Several patterns in the Q1 data point to actionable shelf strategy for New Mexico:
Distribution depth vs. breadth. Some brands prioritize getting into as many stores as possible (breadth), while others focus on deeper SKU counts in fewer stores (depth). In New Mexico’s current market, a balanced approach works best. Get into enough stores for market visibility (aim for top-quartile coverage), but make sure each placement performs well before expanding further.
The reorder signal. CannaiQ’s hourly monitoring detects when a product disappears from a dispensary menu and when it reappears. Frequent disappearances followed by reappearances typically indicate healthy sell-through — the product sells out and gets restocked. Persistent disappearances without return indicate a delisting. Brands should monitor both patterns across their New Mexico accounts.
Competitive displacement. When a new brand appears at a dispensary, it often comes at the expense of an existing brand’s shelf space. In New Mexico, the Q1 data shows that stores carrying more than 7 brands tend to rotate lower-performing brands more aggressively. If your velocity is below the store average, you are at risk regardless of how long you have been listed.
What This Means for Brands
The Q1 2026 data for New Mexico points to several actionable insights:
For brands already in New Mexico:
- Monitor your coverage relative to the 384-dispensary universe. If you are in fewer than 38 stores, you are below the 10% threshold where organic discovery becomes difficult.
- Watch for competitive entries. With 2,242 brands active, new entrants are constantly vying for the same shelf space.
- Track velocity at the store level. Shelf presence without sell-through leads to delisting — and CannaiQ’s hourly monitoring catches these changes in near real time.
For brands considering New Mexico:
- The 5.8 brands-per-store ratio means there is room for new entrants, but category selection matters. Target categories with lower brand density for easier shelf access.
- Start with Albuquerque and Santa Fe for maximum initial impact. These cities account for the highest dispensary concentration.
- Use competitive intelligence to identify stores where your category is underrepresented — these are your highest-probability targets.
Methodology
This report is based on CannaiQ’s shelf intelligence platform, which monitors dispensary product menus across United States on an hourly basis. Key details:
- Data source: Direct menu monitoring from 16+ dispensary platform integrations (not POS data, not surveys)
- Scope: 384 dispensaries in New Mexico with active product listings as of Q1 2026
- Brand counting: Brands are deduplicated via canonical mapping (e.g., “Stiiizy,” “STIIIZY,” and “Stiiizy AIO” all map to a single brand entity)
- Coverage percentage: Calculated as (stores carrying brand ÷ total tracked stores) × 100
- Refresh rate: Hourly for most stores; some platforms update on a 2-4 hour cycle
- Limitations: This data reflects dispensary menus, not sales. A brand may be listed but have low sell-through. Not all licensed dispensaries in New Mexico are represented — only those with digital menu platforms accessible for monitoring.
CannaiQ’s dataset is designed for shelf presence and distribution analytics. For sales-volume data, POS integrations (not offered by CannaiQ) would be required.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many cannabis dispensaries are in New Mexico?
CannaiQ tracks 384 dispensaries with active product menus in New Mexico as of Q1 2026. This count includes only stores with verified shelf data — actual licensed retail locations may differ from this monitored count.
What is the most popular cannabis brand in New Mexico?
Wyld leads New Mexico with presence in 214 of 384 tracked dispensaries (55.7% coverage) as of Q1 2026.
How many cannabis brands operate in New Mexico?
CannaiQ’s shelf monitoring detects 2,242 distinct brands with active SKUs across New Mexico dispensaries in Q1 2026. This includes multi-state operators and local brands alike.
How competitive is the New Mexico cannabis market?
New Mexico averages 5.8 brands per dispensary, indicating moderate brand competition. The top two brands, Wyld and Dime Industries, collectively cover 54% of stores on average.
Where can I find cannabis market data for New Mexico?
CannaiQ provides free New Mexico cannabis market data at cannaiq.co/markets/new-mexico/, updated hourly. This includes brand rankings, pricing data, and dispensary-level shelf intelligence.
How often is New Mexico cannabis data updated?
CannaiQ refreshes dispensary menu data hourly for most stores in New Mexico. Some dispensary platforms update on a 2-4 hour cycle. All data shown in this report reflects the most recent Q1 2026 monitoring period.
What does “coverage percentage” mean in New Mexico cannabis data?
Coverage percentage represents the share of tracked New Mexico dispensaries where a brand has at least one active product listing. For example, a brand with 55.7% coverage is present in roughly 214 of 384 monitored stores. It measures distribution breadth, not sales volume.
Is this POS data or menu data?
This is menu data — CannaiQ monitors what appears on dispensary menus (product listings, pricing, availability) rather than actual point-of-sale transactions. Menu data captures distribution and shelf presence; POS data captures sales velocity. Both are useful, but they answer different questions.
Looking Ahead: Q2 2026
Several dynamics will shape New Mexico’s cannabis market in the coming quarter:
Retail expansion. New Mexico continues to see new dispensary openings. As the store count grows beyond the current 384, existing brands face a choice: invest in distribution to maintain coverage percentage, or accept a declining share of a larger pie. For brands already below 20% coverage, every new store opening without a corresponding placement means falling further behind.
Brand consolidation. At 2,242 active brands, New Mexico may be approaching a saturation point. Expect to see brands with weak sell-through get culled from dispensary shelves in Q2 as retailers optimize their product mix for summer demand. Brands in the bottom quartile of velocity rankings should proactively address account health before the seasonal review cycle hits.
Data-driven decisions. The brands that consistently outperform in markets like New Mexico are the ones that monitor shelf data proactively rather than relying on quarterly sales reports from distributors. Real-time visibility into competitive entries, pricing shifts, and store-level stock patterns gives brands the ability to respond in days rather than months. CannaiQ’s Q2 report will track how these dynamics play out.
Explore More New Mexico Data
- New Mexico Market Intelligence → — live dispensary data, brand rankings, and pricing
- All Markets → — browse all 54 markets we track
- Track Your Brand → — see where your products are on shelves
Data from CannaiQ’s shelf monitoring platform. Updated hourly across 384 New Mexico dispensaries. Report published Q1 2026.
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