The greenhouses sit just north of Phoenix, and Sunday Goods on Glendale Avenue is the retail end of that operation. Dutch-glass houses, sunlight-grown flower, a drive-thru off East Glendale, and a showroom that catches afternoon light through the front glass. I rolled in on a Wednesday afternoon, picked up a tin of seven Sunday Pre Rolls for $40 out the door, and walked out an hour later with a pretty clear sense of why the loyalty crowd keeps coming back. Verdict up front: 4.5 out of 5, and a strong yes for anyone within twenty minutes of 1616 E Glendale Ave.
Sunday Goods runs both adult-use and medical service under Arizona DHS licensing, with the Glendale shop open 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. seven days a week (phone 480-581-5149). The store is the consumer face of Sunday Goods, the AZ-grown brand whose entire pitch is sun-grown cannabis from glass-roof greenhouses rather than warehouse LED rooms. That sourcing story matters, and I will get to why.
Pulling into the Glendale Ave shop
The first thing that struck me was how unhurried the room felt. There were three customers ahead of me at check-in, the queue moved in maybe four minutes, and the showroom did not have that fluorescent-bright, please-buy-something energy you get at chain dispensaries. Wood case fronts, white walls, jars on display rather than locked behind dark glass. The drive-thru lane runs along the east side of the building for online pickups, which is the move if you already know what you want.
Noah was working the floor that afternoon. I had read his name in a recent Leafly review where a regular wrote that he greets everyone with a friendly smile (and based on this visit, that customer was not exaggerating). I told him I was new to Sunday Goods specifically and asked what was actually moving off the shelf right now. He walked me to the flower case first, talked through the difference between the indoor and the greenhouse-grown jars, and pulled out a Sunday Goods house jar of Lemon Cherry Gelato that tested at 27.4% THC. Sun-grown, batch-fresh, and the trichomes were silver-white instead of the slightly amber you get on flower that has sat too long.
I asked about the deal stack. The everyday loyalty discount is straightforward: students, veterans, and anyone 65 and up get 10% off every single day, no app gymnastics, no rotating promo cycle. Combine that with the early-bird and late-night windows the store runs, and the math gets pretty friendly fast. Noah told me the regulars who come in at 8:15 a.m. tend to stack the morning discount with the senior or veteran rate, and he was not wrong about how that prices out at the register. I ended up grabbing a tin of seven Sunday Pre Rolls (half-gram cones, premium flower, $40 for the pack), a single Sunday Goods 1g cart in the strain Strawberry Banana ($35), and a 100mg gummy tin because I wanted to see how the edible side held up. Walked out at $98 with the loyalty discount applied. That is not the cheapest dispensary trip in Phoenix, but every product in the bag was Sunday Goods house, sun-grown, and lab-tested with COAs viewable from the QR on the package.
The menu and the greenhouse story

Sunday Goods is unusual in Arizona because the shop and the cultivation are the same operation. The brand grows its flower in a glass-roof greenhouse outside Phoenix, leans on Arizona sun for the photoperiod instead of the usual 12-hour LED schedule, and finishes the cure in jars that show up on this shelf within weeks. That is why the menu is unusually deep on house flower: roughly two dozen Sunday Goods strain SKUs at any given time, plus the pre-roll lineup, plus the cart and live-resin program.
Noah pointed out that the Sunday Pre Rolls tin I picked up rotates strain mixes seasonally. The current run was a hybrid blend across three strains, packaged as half-gram cones, sealed in the cream-and-gold tin that sits at the front of the merch wall. He called it the easiest entry point for someone new to the brand, and the price made sense for that role. The deeper buyers usually go to the jarred eighths, which run $25 to $45 depending on strain and tier.
Outside of the house brand, the menu still goes wide on partner brands like Aeriz, STIIIZY, Wyld, and Dr. Zodiak’s, with edibles, vape pods, concentrates, and topicals all represented. Concentrates lean toward live resin and live rosin from the Sunday Goods lab. The drive-thru is fast for picking up a confirmed online order: place it on the Leafly menu or sundaygoods.com, drive around, ID, payment, done in under three minutes if your slot lines up.
What I bought: Sunday Pre Rolls tin

The tin is the kind of packaging that tells you the brand cares how the product looks on a coffee table. Cream metal lid, gold script on the front, seven half-gram cones in pristine condition lined up under a paper insert. The cones were rolled tight, did not rip when I unsealed the tin, and the smell when I cracked the seal was citrus-forward with a sweet undertone (consistent with the seasonal hybrid blend). One cone, lit at the porch, hit smooth in three slow draws, ash held white-grey, and the head buzz settled in around the four-minute mark. By minute eight I was relaxed shoulders, slight body hum, and a clear-enough headspace that I could still hold a conversation about the visit.
For $40 a tin, the math is $5.71 per half-gram cone. That undercuts most of the named-brand pre-roll multipacks at this tier on the Phoenix market and the smoke quality landed closer to a $50 to $60 tin from a craft brand than to a value-line throwaway. The half-gram size also worked for my use case, which was an afternoon session that did not need a full gram joint. Sunday Goods’ own COA for the batch was viewable via the QR on the bottom of the tin, which checked out clean for residual solvents and pesticides.
Pros
- Sun-grown house flower from Sunday Goods’ own Dutch-glass greenhouse, with COAs on every package
- 10% off every day for students, veterans, and customers 65 and up, no app required
- Drive-thru lane for confirmed online orders pulls cars through in under three minutes
- Showroom is calm and unrushed, budtender (Noah on this visit) actually knows the menu
- Deep house menu with roughly two dozen Sunday Goods strain SKUs, plus partner brands like STIIIZY, Wyld, and Dr. Zodiak’s
Cons
- Parking lot is on the small side, and the chain-fence situation along the lot edge is awkward at busy times
- Glendale Ave traffic can stretch the in-and-out window if you visit on a Friday or Saturday evening
- Pricing on house jars sits in the mid-tier band ($25 to $45 eighths), which is fair but not a value-shop play
FAQ
Does Sunday Goods Phoenix have a drive-thru?
Yes. The drive-thru lane runs along the east side of the 1616 E Glendale Ave building and serves confirmed online pickup orders. Place the order through Leafly or sundaygoods.com, drive around, show ID and payment, and you are out in under three minutes if your slot is ready.
What deals does Sunday Goods Phoenix run every day?
Students, veterans, and customers age 65 and up get 10% off every day, no app or code required. The shop also rotates early-morning and late-evening discount windows that stack with the loyalty rate at the register.
Does Sunday Goods serve medical patients or only adult-use?
Sunday Goods Phoenix is licensed by Arizona DHS for both medical and adult-use sales. Medical patients should bring a valid AZ medical card to access the medical-tier pricing and purchase limits.
What hours is Sunday Goods on Glendale Ave open?
The Glendale Ave location is open 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. every day of the week, including weekends and holidays. Phone is 480-581-5149.
Where does Sunday Goods grow its flower?
Sunday Goods grows its house flower in a Dutch-glass greenhouse outside Phoenix, using Arizona sunlight rather than indoor LED lighting. The cultivation and the retail shop are the same brand, which is why the menu skews so heavily toward Sunday Goods house strains.
What is the parking situation at 1616 E Glendale Ave?
Parking is on the small side and the lot is bordered by a chain-link fence along the property line. Most weekdays it is fine; Friday and Saturday evenings get tight. The drive-thru helps if you are picking up rather than browsing.
Best for, skip if
Best for: anyone who wants Phoenix-grown, sun-grown flower from a single-source operation, customers who can stack the student/veteran/65-plus 10% discount, and shoppers who would rather use a drive-thru than walk into a busy showroom on a Friday night. The tin format on Sunday Pre Rolls is also a good fit for a casual smoker who wants seven sessions out of one purchase without committing to a full ounce.
Skip if you are hunting for the absolute lowest eighth price in the Phoenix metro (Sunday Goods sits in the mid-tier $25 to $45 band), or if you specifically want a deep selection of partner brands beyond the house menu (you will see those brands here, but the inventory bias is toward Sunday Goods house product). For a counterpoint shop on the same Phoenix corridor, our JARS Metrocenter Phoenix review covers a deeper third-party menu in the same metro. If the daily-deal stack is more interesting to you than the single-source greenhouse hook, our Story Cannabis Midtown Phoenix review walks through how the 50 percent rotation actually works and which day to time for which category. For other Arizona dispensary coverage, the Arizona dispensary hub is the index.





