cannabis.wine / intel

Alaska

Last updated July 7, 2026 AI-drafted — pending review

Alaska routes intoxicating hemp — including delta-9 hemp beverages, delta-8, delta-10, HHC, and THCA flower — through Alcohol and Marijuana Control Office (AMCO)-licensed marijuana retailers. Lt. Gov. Nancy Dahlstrom signed the 3 AAC 306 amendments on October 10, 2023, effective November 3, 2023, treating any hemp-derived product containing delta-9 THC or otherwise intoxicating and intended for human consumption as a marijuana product subject to AMCO licensing. In May 2025 the U.S. District Court for Alaska upheld those rules against a hemp-industry challenge. Non-intoxicating hemp CBD remains lawful at general retail. Adult-use cannabis was legalized in November 2014 via Ballot Measure 2. SB 208 (2026) — a hemp cultivation overhaul — passed the Senate 20-0 in May 2026 and is pending in the House; it does not create a hemp retail lane.

Status
Blocked
DTC shipping
Restricted — out-of-state DTC shipments of intoxicating hemp face AMCO enforcement; non-intoxicating CBD DTC generally allowed; cannabis delivery only within AMCO-licensed system
Serving cap
Cannabis dispensary edibles: 10mg per serving (AMCO regulations under 3 AAC 306); Hemp retail: intoxicating hemp beverages not permitted outside AMCO channel
Container cap
Cannabis dispensary edibles: 100mg per package (10 servings); Hemp retail: no hemp beverage container cap applies because intoxicating hemp beverages are not lawful at hemp retail
Age gate
21+ for any intoxicating cannabinoid (all sold through AMCO channel); non-intoxicating hemp CBD has no state statutory age gate
License
Required for intoxicating products — AMCO marijuana retailer license (3 AAC 306); Division of Agriculture Industrial Hemp Program registration for cultivation and processing; no state-level hemp retail license for intoxicating cannabinoids exists — that channel is closed
Regulator
Alaska Alcohol and Marijuana Control Office (AMCO) — staffs Marijuana Control Board; retail licensing, testing, packaging, enforcement for any intoxicating cannabinoid product for human consumption (3 AAC 306); Alaska Division of Agriculture — Industrial Hemp Program under AS 03.05.076; Alaska Department of Public Safety — controlled-substance enforcement
Current rule effective
November 3, 2023
Next known change — in 117 days
November 12, 2026 — Federal P.L. 119-37 § 781 takes effect. Alaska's dispensary-only routing already anticipates Section 781's synthetic-cannabinoid exclusion and total-THC test; practical disruption at Alaska hemp retail will be minimal because that channel is already closed. Any residual out-of-state DTC intoxicating-hemp shipments lose Farm Bill cover on that date.
Federal alignment (P.L. 119-37 § 781)
Aligned with federal Alaska's 3 AAC 306 framework, upheld by federal court in May 2025, treats intoxicating cannabinoids as marijuana regardless of hemp origin — which is functionally the same outcome as federal Section 781's synthetic-cannabinoid exclusion. Alaska is among the states least disrupted by the November 12, 2026 federal effective date because the intoxicating hemp retail market is already closed.

Retail channels

  • AMCO-licensed adult-use marijuana retailers: only lawful channel for delta-9, delta-8, delta-10, HHC, THCA, and any intoxicating cannabinoid
  • General retail (grocery, wellness, gas stations): non-intoxicating hemp CBD, CBN, CBG only
  • Delta-8, delta-10, HHC, THC-O, hemp delta-9 edibles and beverages: NOT permitted at hemp retail
  • THCA flower: treated as marijuana product under 3 AAC 306; dispensary-only
  • Online DTC of intoxicating hemp into Alaska: enforcement risk under 3 AAC 306
  • Cannabis on-site consumption endorsements available for some AMCO retailers

Statutes & bills cited

  • AS 03.05.076 — Alaska Industrial Hemp Program; adopts federal 0.3% delta-9 dry-weight threshold at harvest
  • Ballot Measure 2 (2014) — adult-use cannabis legalization; codified at AS 17.38
  • 3 AAC 306 amendments (signed Oct 10, 2023 by Lt. Gov. Dahlstrom; effective Nov 3, 2023) — intoxicating hemp products intended for human consumption treated as marijuana; AMCO-licensed retail only
  • Bio Gen-style challenge to 3 AAC 306 — U.S. District Court for Alaska, May 2025 ruling upheld state rules restricting intoxicating hemp sales to AMCO-licensed marijuana retailers
  • SB 208 (2026, Sen. Bjorkman) — Industrial Hemp Program overhaul; passed Senate 20-0 May 2026; pending in House; would allow reconditioning/remediation of hemp testing 0.3-1.0% delta-9
  • AS 17.38.900 — cannabis definitions incorporating hemp when intoxicating

Alaska has one of the country’s most clearly-closed intoxicating hemp retail markets, achieved through executive rulemaking rather than legislation. Two statutes matter for the hemp/cannabis boundary. AS 03.05.076 created the Alaska Industrial Hemp Program under the Division of Agriculture, adopting the federal 0.3% delta-9 THC dry-weight threshold to define hemp at harvest. Ballot Measure 2 (November 2014) legalized adult-use cannabis 21+ through licensed marijuana retailers administered by the Alcohol and Marijuana Control Office (AMCO), which staffs the Marijuana Control Board. The pivotal move came in 2023: Lt. Gov. Nancy Dahlstrom signed amendments to 3 AAC 306 on October 10, 2023 with an effective date of November 3, 2023. Those amendments treat any hemp-derived product that contains delta-9 THC or is otherwise intoxicating, when intended for human consumption, as a marijuana product subject to AMCO licensing. In practice that captures hemp-derived delta-9 beverages and edibles, delta-8 and delta-10, HHC, THC-O, and — critically for the Southern-style workaround — THCA flower, which is treated as marijuana because it converts to delta-9 THC when heated. The hemp industry challenged the rules; in May 2025, the U.S. District Court for Alaska upheld the state’s rules restricting intoxicating hemp-derived THC sales to AMCO-licensed marijuana retailers. The federal ruling settled the preemption question in Alaska and paved the way for uninterrupted enforcement. Vape shops, gas stations, and unlicensed retailers may not sell intoxicating hemp products for human consumption; non-intoxicating hemp CBD, CBN, and CBG remain lawful at general retail with no state-level age gate. Adult-use dispensaries follow AMCO’s cannabis edible caps (10mg per serving, 100mg per package). SB 208 (2026), sponsored by Sen. Jesse Bjorkman (R), passed the Alaska Senate unanimously 20-0 in May 2026 and moved to the House. It focuses on the cultivation side — updated seed sources, post-harvest testing, transportation, corrective-action procedures before harsh penalties, and a new tier allowing hemp testing 0.3-1.0% delta-9 to be retained/reconditioned/remediated before destruction. SB 208 does not create a hemp beverage retail lane and does not disturb 3 AAC 306. Alaska’s AG has not joined the multi-state NAAG letter on federal intoxicating hemp action, presumably because Alaska’s rules already achieve what Section 781 will. For the federal cliff on November 12, 2026, Alaska is among the least-disrupted major markets: the intoxicating hemp retail channel outside dispensaries has been closed since November 2023, and the May 2025 federal court ruling makes that outcome legally durable.


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This state summary has not yet been reviewed by counsel. Verify with your attorney before making commercial decisions.