The Price Paradox in Spain’s Cannabis Clubs
In the Spanish underground cannabis scene, a curious economic phenomenon has emerged. A single gram of high-end cannabis concentrate can cost more than a gram of cocaine.
It’s known as BHO, or butane hash oil. Long known in the US, BHO has been spreading in the Iberian Peninsula.
Cannabis is still technically illegal in Spain, but personal consumption and cultivation in private spaces are decriminalized. This legal loophole has given rise to cannabis social clubs, member-only cooperatives that operate in a quasi-legal framework. In cities like Barcelona, hundreds of clubs serve thousands of consumers with locally grown flower, imported hash, and in some cases, artisanal concentrates.
Prices in Spanish clubs are relatively affordable.
The average donation for cannabis flower is about ten euros per gram, with hashish averaging seven euros per gram. Even top-shelf indoor strains rarely exceed twenty-five euros per gram, and outdoor-grown flowers can be as cheap as four to seven euros per gram. This contrasts sharply with places like the Netherlands, where Amsterdam coffeeshops may charge twenty euros per gram for premium weed.
But while flowers and hash remain inexpensive, the price of cannabis extracts tells a different story.
BHO and the Rise of High-End Concentrates
BHO is a potent cannabis concentrate extracted using butane as a solvent. The process yields sticky, high-THC products like shatter, wax, and budder, which can contain mindblowing upwards of 70 to 90% THC.
Also read: Are You Smoking Gas… or Gas Gas? Inside the Hydrocarbons That Built BHO
In the Spanish cannabis club scene, BHO is relatively rare but coveted for its strength. Street and club-level BHO pricing in Spain now ranges from fifty to sixty euros per gram, with some ultra-high-potency samples commanding one hundred euros per gram or more.
That places it above the going price of cocaine in most Spanish cities, which can be bought for €50 to €70 a gram.
Spain has long been one of Europe’s primary cocaine entry points, with the Iberian Peninsula receiving bulk shipments from Latin America. According to Euro Weekly News, the price of cocaine has remained relatively stable since the 1980s, at about sixty euros per gram on the street. Despite inflation, oversupply and efficient trafficking networks have kept the price low.
BHO is one of the few drugs in Spain that can cost more per gram than cocaine. For context, hashish retails at six to nine euros per gram, cannabis flower at four to fifteen euros per gram, and even boutique rosin, a solventless concentrate, rarely exceeds seventy euros per gram.
In legal markets like the United States and Canada, BHO prices are often lower due to regulated production and industrial-scale extraction. In US dispensaries, BHO averages nineteen to twenty-five dollars per gram, while rosin averages thirty-five to forty-five dollars per gram. In Canada, mid-tier shatter or BHO can cost thirty to forty dollars per gram, and top-shelf rosin or full-melt hash ranges from seventy to one hundred twenty dollars per gram.
Spain’s prices for this type of concentrate remain inflated due to the gray-market nature of production and the risk incurred by extractors. This situation has also contributed to the emergence of small, unregulated labs, with associated explosion risks.
Premium Pricing and a Culture of Connoisseurship
The high price of BHO is driven by several factors.
First, BHO concentrates can contain up to ninety percent THC, making them many times more potent than traditional flower or hash. Consumers are paying for strength, as a single dab can deliver the psychoactive punch of several joints.
Producing BHO involves flammable gases, and homemade labs have caused fatal explosions in cities like Murcia and Granada. These risks raise production costs and reduce supply, especially among amateurs.
Unlike flower or hashish, high-THC concentrates like BHO exist in a murky legal space. Spanish law does not clearly differentiate between extraction types, but concentrates with high THC levels may attract harsher penalties. This legal uncertainty adds a risk premium to the product. Few cannabis clubs regularly stock BHO, and most extractions are done in small batches by specialists or imported from abroad. The lack of scale keeps prices high.
Lastly, among seasoned users, BHO carries a reputation for purity and intensity. In the same way that rare whiskies or high-end perfumes fetch a premium, boutique concentrates appeal to connoisseurs willing to pay more.
BHO, Rosin and The Elites
BHO is sometimes confused with rosin, a solventless extract made by pressing cannabis under heat and pressure. In Barcelona’s clubs, rosin can cost twenty to fifty euros per gram, depending on quality. The finest strain-specific, small-batch rosins, often called live rosin, may reach seventy to ninety euros per gram. Unlike rosin, which is made with artisanal equipment and sold in limited drops, BHO can be produced at scale yet remains scarce due to regulatory and safety constraints.
That a cannabis product could cost more than cocaine, broadly used in the country, upends traditional drug hierarchies. Cocaine has long been seen as the expensive stimulant of the elite, while cannabis was viewed as cheap and abundant. Yet in contemporary Spain, a gram of professionally made BHO can outstrip cocaine in cost, price, purity, and value.
Rolando García
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