Oklahoma is considering a significant shift in how it taxes moist snuff tobacco (MST). Under the proposed HB 3983, the state would move away from a price-based system to a specific weight-based tax. This move aims to simplify the tax code, stabilize state revenue, and create a more equitable market for nicotine products.
Shifting the Tax Philosophy
Currently, Oklahoma levies a tax on MST equal to 60% of its wholesale value (an ad valorem tax). HB 3983 proposes replacing this with a flat rate of $1.72 per ounce.
This change reflects a fundamental principle in excise tax policy: taxing the quantity of a product is often more effective than taxing its price. While taxes on alcohol are scaled by potency (proof) and carbon taxes are scaled by emissions, nicotine products lack a single “harm-causing” ingredient that is easily isolated. Therefore, taxing by physical volume or weight is the most logical proxy for consumption.
Why Weight-Based Taxes Outperform Price-Based Taxes
Switching to a weight-based system offers three primary advantages:
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Revenue Stability: Price-based taxes are volatile; if a manufacturer slashes prices or a consumer switches to a discount brand, the state’s tax revenue drops. A weight-based tax ensures the state collects the same amount regardless of market fluctuations.
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Market Neutrality: Under the current system, a premium can of snuff pays significantly more tax than a budget brand of the exact same size. A weight-based tax levels the playing field, charging both $2.06 (for a standard 1.2-ounce can) regardless of the wholesale price.
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Preventing “Down-Trading”: Price-based taxes inadvertently encourage consumers to buy cheaper, lower-quality products to avoid higher taxes. Specific weight-based taxes remove this incentive.
Proposed Specific Tax Rates by Product Category
| Product | Proposed Tax Basis |
| Vapor Products | Per Milliliter |
| Heated Tobacco | Per Ounce |
| Nicotine Pouches | Per Ounce |
| Moist Snuff/Snus | Per Ounce |
Oklahoma in the National Context
If passed, Oklahoma would join nearly half of the U.S. states that already utilize weight-based taxation for MST. At $1.72 per ounce, Oklahoma’s rate would be the fifth-highest in the country—well above the national average of $1.18 per ounce among weight-taxing states.
Note on Inflation: One drawback of specific taxes is that their “real” value can erode over time due to inflation. Unlike price-based taxes, which rise naturally as products get more expensive, a flat $1.72 remains $1.72 unless the legislature adjusts it.
The Bottom Line
While the Oklahoma Legislature’s fiscal analysis suggests the change will be revenue-neutral in the short term, the long-term benefits are structural. By adopting HB 3983, Oklahoma would move toward a more “principled” tax regime: one that is simpler for businesses to navigate, more predictable for state budgeting, and fairer for the consumer.
