Tickets
Reserve your seat in Bozeman
Join cultivators, researchers, consultants, operators, and industry professionals from across the country for three immersive days in Bozeman, Montana.
Early Bird Tickets — Ends Friday, June 19th
The Cannabis Cultivation & Science Conference returns to Bozeman — bringing together growers, researchers, facility teams, and industry professionals for three days of immersive education, hands-on workshops, and unforgettable community experiences.
Last year's attendees called the workshops "incredible," the sensory event "epic," and the facility tours "one of the best parts of the entire weekend." In 2026, we're expanding the program with new speakers, more workshop opportunities and additional after-hours networking events.
Join us at Collective Elevation — Montana's most awarded living soil cultivation facility — for deep-dive sessions, greenhouse and farm tours, sponsor demos, and meaningful conversations with cultivators from across the country. Whether you're a commercial grower, cultivation scientist, or simply passionate about soil and plant health, this event is designed to elevate your craft.
General Admission
Early Bird $200
Regular price $250
Access to the facility tour, conference talks, panels, on site demos, vendors, sensory and networking events and Saturday/Sunday programming.
- Friday facility tours
- Welcome mixer & industry social
- All presentations, panels and demos (Sat/Sun)
- Vendor access
- Sunday closing sessions
Does not include the Friday daytime workshops.
Full Conference Ticket
Early Bird $320
Regular price $370
Everything in General Admission plus a full day of back-to-back workshops on Friday with lunch included.
- Everything in General Admission
- Back-to-back Friday daytime workshops
- Lunch included on Friday
- Hands-on cultivation sessions
More coming soon
Check back for schedule announcements, workshop details, and exhibitor applications.
A few things to know
Early bird pricing ends after June 19th
Workshop tickets are limited and sell out
Out-of-state attendees should book travel early
