Americans adults are now more likely to smoke marijuana than tobacco cigarettes.
That’s according to new survey data from Gallup finding that 15 percent of U.S. adults reported that they smoke cannabis, which is more than the 11 percent of who told the polling firm that they have smoked any cigarettes in the past week.
“While not statistically different from the average of 14% in 2021-2022,” Gallup said of the latest two-year average of U.S. marijuana use polling data, the rise to 15 percent is “consistent with the upward trend in recent years.”
Among other findings, the latest data—from 2023 to 2024—indicate that men are more likely than women to report smoking marijuana, at 17 percent compared to 11 percent. Younger adults, ages 18 to 34, were also more likely (19 percent) to smoke cannabis than adults aged 35 to 54 (18 percent) and those 55 and older (10 percent).
Gallup says the results are reported in two-year averages to improve statistical reliability.
By political party identification, reported use rates differed sharply. Among Democrats, 23 percent reported smoking marijuana, more than twice the 10 percent rate reported by Republicans. Independents were in the middle, at 14 percent.
The percentage
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