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Oklahoma

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

Oklahoma runs a permissive hemp-derived Delta-9 market alongside one of the country's most active medical cannabis programs, but the retail lane for intoxicating hemp is narrower than it looks. SB 868 (2019) established Oklahoma's hemp framework under 2 O.S. § 3-401 et seq., and SB 1033 (2021) explicitly excluded delta-8 THC from Oklahoma's marijuana definition — a rare permissive move. Oklahoma applies a total-THC calculation (delta-9 + 0.877 × THCA) under Okla. Admin. Code § 35:30-24-2, capped at 0.3% dry weight. There is no state-level milligram cap on hemp beverages and no express age restriction in the hemp statute (21+ operational floor observed at retail). Medical cannabis operates through the Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority (OMMA) under 63 O.S. § 427 et seq., with ~9,000+ licensed businesses at the peak (down significantly through 2024-2026 as OMMA tightened compliance and rejected renewals). Gov. Stitt has publicly pushed for tighter intoxicating hemp regulation since 2023, and in April 2025 directed OMMA and the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics (OBNDD) to intensify enforcement against unregulated psychoactive products. The Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, Food and Forestry (ODAFF) issued a Hemp Clarification Letter on January 16, 2026 confirming total-THC standard and previewing Section 781 impact. Adult-use ballot measure (SQ 820) failed in March 2023 by 62-38 margin.

Status
Restrictions
DTC shipping
Permitted for federally compliant hemp Delta-9 products; SB 1033 (2021) explicitly protects hemp-derived delta-8 shipment into Oklahoma; national hemp brands (ATLRx, Cann, Floral, others) ship freely into Oklahoma addresses; age verification widely used at checkout; medical cannabis delivery not authorized across state lines
Serving cap
None at state level; 0.3% total-THC dry-weight standard applies (Okla. Admin. Code § 35:30-24-2); OMMA medical marijuana edibles follow separate OMMA potency rules
Container cap
None at state level; 0.3% total-THC dry-weight standard applies; ODAFF Hemp Clarification Letter (January 2026) confirmed no state mg-per-container cap currently, but previewed Section 781's incoming 0.4mg total-THC per-container ceiling as the operative post-November 12, 2026 constraint
Age gate
21+ for OMMA medical marijuana (18+ with qualifying condition and physician recommendation); no express state age restriction in hemp statute — 21+ operational floor observed at retail; some retailers have adopted 21+ policies voluntarily
License
ODAFF Industrial Hemp Program registration required for cultivation and processing; USDA hemp producer license via USDA-approved plan; no state-level hemp retail license currently required; OMMA licensing for medical cannabis dispensaries, growers, processors, transporters (separate framework)
Regulator
Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, Food and Forestry (ODAFF) — administers Oklahoma Industrial Hemp Program under 2 O.S. § 3-401 et seq. with USDA-approved plan; issued Hemp Clarification Letter January 16, 2026; Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority (OMMA) — administers medical cannabis under 63 O.S. § 427 et seq.; Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control (OBNDD) — enforcement authority against unregulated psychoactive products per April 2025 executive direction; Oklahoma Attorney General — enforcement
Current rule effective
November 1, 2021
Next known change — in 117 days
November 12, 2026 — Federal P.L. 119-37 § 781 takes effect. Oklahoma already applies a total-THC calculation, so Section 781's shift to a federal total-THC standard is not a definitional surprise. However, Oklahoma has no state-level per-container mg cap, so Section 781's 0.4mg total-THC ceiling will directly reshape the hemp Delta-9 beverage math in Oklahoma with no state pre-alignment on that dimension. Gov. Stitt has signaled continued interest in intoxicating hemp restrictions, and the 2026 session (ends May 31) had multiple bills in flux. Expect legislative action in the 2027 session with federal cover.
Federal alignment (P.L. 119-37 § 781)
Aligned with federal Oklahoma's total-THC calculation under Okla. Admin. Code § 35:30-24-2 aligns with Section 781's federal total-THC standard, so the definitional shift on November 12, 2026 is not a definitional surprise. The gap is on per-container potency: Oklahoma has no state mg cap, so Section 781's 0.4mg total-THC ceiling will reshape hemp Delta-9 beverage math with no state pre-alignment. ODAFF's January 2026 Hemp Clarification Letter previewed this impact explicitly. Given Gov. Stitt's ongoing enforcement direction against unregulated psychoactive products, expect Oklahoma to codify tighter rules in the 2027 session — likely folding intoxicating hemp partially into OMMA's jurisdiction per OMMA's July 2025 Executive Advisory Council recommendations.

Retail channels

  • General retail (grocery, convenience, wellness, smoke shops, CBD stores): hemp-derived Delta-9 beverages, gummies, tinctures, edibles under 0.3% total-THC
  • OMMA-licensed medical marijuana dispensaries: full-potency cannabis products for OMMA patients; ~2,000+ operating dispensaries as of 2026 (down from peak of ~3,000+)
  • Delta-8, delta-10, HHC, THC-O: technically legal under SB 1033 (2021) for delta-8; other converted cannabinoids in gray area subject to Gov. Stitt's enforcement direction
  • Hemp Delta-9 beverages: sold at general retail; 5-10mg per can common; no mg cap currently applies
  • THCA flower: NOT LAWFUL at hemp retail — Oklahoma total-THC calculation catches THCA; OMMA-licensed dispensaries only
  • Online DTC into Oklahoma: national hemp brands ship freely (10mg gummies, hemp beverages); Farm Bill compliance
  • Adult-use cannabis: NONE (SQ 820 failed March 2023)
  • Retail producers (restaurants, bakeries adding hemp): follow ODAFF Hemp Clarification Letter guidance — no addition of THC to product after harvest that would exceed 0.3% total-THC

Statutes & bills cited

  • 2 O.S. § 3-401 et seq. — Oklahoma Industrial Hemp Program; established under HB 2913 (2018), expanded via SB 868 (2019)
  • SB 868 (2019) — signed by Gov. Kevin Stitt April 2019; decriminalized hemp at state level; directed ODAFF to develop USDA-compliant state hemp program
  • SB 1033 (2021) — signed by Gov. Stitt; explicitly excluded delta-8 THC products from Oklahoma's marijuana definition; effective November 1, 2021 — a rare permissive move
  • Okla. Admin. Code § 35:30-24-2 — ODAFF hemp regulations; total-THC calculation formula (delta-9 + 0.877 × THCA); 0.3% dry-weight cap
  • 63 O.S. § 427 et seq. — Oklahoma Medical Marijuana and Patient Protection Act; established OMMA framework under State Question 788 (2018)
  • 63 Okla. Stat. § 427.2(26) — medical marijuana definitions
  • State Question 788 (2018) — voter-approved medical cannabis; passed 57-43
  • State Question 820 (2023) — adult-use ballot measure; failed March 7, 2023 by 62-38 margin
  • Governor Stitt Executive Direction (2023, reinforced April 2025) — instructing OMMA and OBNDD to examine and intensify enforcement against unregulated psychoactive products including hemp-derived intoxicating cannabinoids
  • ODAFF Hemp Clarification Letter (January 16, 2026) — confirmed total-THC calculation standard; previewed Section 781 impact effective November 12, 2026; addressed post-harvest addition of THC to hemp products
  • HB 2913 (2018) — Oklahoma Industrial Hemp Agricultural Pilot Program (foundational)

Oklahoma runs an unusually open hemp-derived Delta-9 market for a red state, structured around three legislative acts and the country’s largest per-capita medical cannabis program. SB 868 (2019), signed by Gov. Kevin Stitt in April 2019, decriminalized hemp at the state level and directed the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, Food and Forestry (ODAFF) to develop a USDA-compliant state hemp program under 2 O.S. § 3-401 et seq. The Oklahoma Industrial Hemp Agricultural Pilot Program at HB 2913 (2018) laid the foundation. Critically, SB 1033 (2021) explicitly excluded delta-8 THC products from Oklahoma’s marijuana definition — a rare permissive move at a time when most states were closing that loophole. The result: Oklahoma retailers can lawfully stock and sell hemp-derived delta-8, delta-9, delta-10, and other cannabinoids provided they meet the total-THC cap. That cap is calculated under Okla. Admin. Code § 35:30-24-2 as delta-9 + 0.877 × THCA at ≤0.3% dry weight — which does close the THCA flower loophole at Oklahoma retail. There is no state-level milligram cap on hemp beverages, no express state age restriction in the hemp statute, and no separate hemp retail license required beyond the ODAFF cultivation/processing framework. National hemp brands ship hemp-derived Delta-9 beverages (5-10mg per can), 10mg gummies, and higher-potency products freely into Oklahoma addresses. Alongside the permissive hemp market, Oklahoma runs the country’s largest medical cannabis program under the Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority (OMMA), established by State Question 788 (voter-approved 57-43 in June 2018) and codified at 63 O.S. § 427 et seq. At the program’s 2022 peak, Oklahoma had ~9,000 licensed cannabis businesses. That number has declined significantly through 2024-2026 as OMMA tightened compliance and rejected renewals; approximately 2,000+ operating dispensaries remain as of mid-2026. Adult-use legalization has failed — State Question 820 was rejected 62-38 on March 7, 2023, and no comparable measure is on the current ballot. What’s changed since 2023 is Governor Stitt’s posture. Stitt issued executive direction in 2023 instructing OMMA and the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control (OBNDD) to examine intoxicating hemp regulation, and reinforced that direction in April 2025 by ordering intensified enforcement against unregulated psychoactive products including hemp-derived delta-8, delta-10, HHC, and THC-O. OMMA’s Executive Advisory Council handout from July 11, 2025 expressly framed the first legislative step as removing statutory prohibitions that prevent OMMA from regulating delta-8 and delta-10 THC — language that has carried into 2026 session conversations. ODAFF issued a Hemp Clarification Letter on January 16, 2026 that reinforced the total-THC compliance standard and explicitly previewed Section 781’s impact on Oklahoma retailers: hemp products with more than 0.3% total THC or more than 0.4mg total THC per container will fall outside the federal hemp definition on November 12, 2026 and revert to Schedule I under the Controlled Substances Act. The letter also addressed a specific compliance question — post-harvest addition of THC to hemp products that would cause the finished product to exceed the total-THC caps is not permitted. For the federal cliff on November 12, 2026, Oklahoma is one of the more exposed permissive markets: the total-THC calculation is already in place, but no state mg cap means Section 781’s 0.4mg per-container ceiling will reshape hemp Delta-9 beverage math without pre-alignment. Given Stitt’s ongoing enforcement posture and OMMA’s stated interest in gaining jurisdiction over intoxicating hemp, expect Oklahoma to codify tighter rules in the 2027 session with federal cover — likely folding intoxicating hemp partially or fully into OMMA’s regulatory jurisdiction, imposing serving/package mg caps, and possibly establishing a formal state 21+ age gate. The 2026 session (running through May 31) had multiple bills in play but none reached final passage.


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