Last verified: March 2026
What Products Are Available in Oklahoma?
Oklahoma's medical cannabis program, established by State Question 788 (2018), gives licensed patients access to one of the broadest product selections in any medical-only state. Dispensaries carry flower, pre-rolls, infused pre-rolls, concentrates, edibles, tinctures, topicals, and cannabis beverages. Unlike many medical programs, Oklahoma places no qualifying-condition restrictions — any condition a physician deems appropriate can support a recommendation.
All products must pass ISO 17025-accredited laboratory testing and be tracked through the Metrc seed-to-sale system before reaching dispensary shelves. As of June 1, 2025, all products must also comply with the tamper-evident pre-packaging mandate under HB 2807.
Oklahoma is a medical-only state. You must hold a valid OMMA patient card to purchase any cannabis product at a licensed dispensary. There is no recreational cannabis program.
Flower (Smokable Cannabis)
Flower is the dried, cured bud of the cannabis plant and remains the most popular product category in Oklahoma. It can be smoked in a pipe, water pipe, or dry herb vaporizer. Dispensaries sell flower in pre-weighed amounts, typically from one gram up to an ounce.
- Onset time: 1 to 5 minutes
- Duration: 1 to 3 hours
- Potency indicator: THC percentage on the label
Oklahoma's flower market has experienced dramatic price compression. Wholesale flower prices fell from $2,229 per pound in 2020 to $915 per pound by mid-2022 — a 59% collapse driven by massive oversupply. An OMMA-commissioned study in June 2023 documented a 32:1 supply-to-demand ratio, making Oklahoma the cheapest wholesale cannabis market in America across nearly every category.
Pre-Rolls and Infused Pre-Rolls
Pre-rolls are pre-made joints sold ready to smoke. Standard pre-rolls contain ground flower, while infused pre-rolls are coated or filled with concentrates (such as oil, kief, or hash) for higher potency. All pre-rolls sold in Oklahoma must meet the tamper-evident pre-packaging requirements under HB 2807, effective June 1, 2025.
- Onset time: 1 to 5 minutes
- Duration: 1 to 3 hours
- Potency indicator: THC percentage; total mg per joint
Concentrates
Concentrates are highly potent cannabis extracts available in several forms, including wax, shatter, oils, and vape cartridges. They are consumed by dabbing (vaporizing on a heated surface), using a concentrate-specific vaporizer, or through pre-filled vape cartridges that attach to a battery pen.
- Onset time: Immediate to 5 minutes
- Duration: 1 to 3 hours
- Potency indicator: THC percentage (commonly 60%–90%+)
Vape cartridges are the most accessible form of concentrate for newer patients, offering controlled doses without the equipment required for dabbing. Due to their high potency, all concentrates should be approached with caution by patients new to cannabis.
Edibles
Edibles are cannabis-infused food products — gummies, chocolates, capsules, baked goods, and other forms. Because they pass through the digestive system, edibles produce effects that are slower to onset but longer-lasting and often more intense than inhaled products.
- Onset time: 30 minutes to 2 hours
- Duration: 4 to 8 hours (sometimes longer)
- Potency indicator: Milligrams of THC per serving and per package
Proposed Edible Limits (HB 4454)
Oklahoma currently has no per-serving THC cap on edibles. However, HB 4454 (2026) would limit edibles to 10 mg THC per serving if enacted. Patients should monitor this legislation, as it would significantly change the edible product landscape in Oklahoma. Until any cap is enacted, dispensaries may sell edibles with higher per-serving potency than states with established limits.
Cannabis Beverages
Cannabis-infused beverages have become increasingly popular in Oklahoma. Available as teas, sparkling waters, lemonades, and other drinkable formats, beverages follow the same testing and labeling requirements as solid edibles.
- Onset time: 15 minutes to 1 hour (often faster than solid edibles)
- Duration: 2 to 4 hours
- Potency indicator: Milligrams of THC per serving and per container
Many patients prefer beverages for their more predictable onset compared to solid edibles, as liquid products can be absorbed more quickly.
Tinctures
Tinctures are liquid cannabis extracts administered with a dropper, placed under the tongue (sublingual) or added to food and drinks. Sublingual use produces faster effects because cannabinoids absorb directly into the bloodstream through tissue under the tongue.
- Onset time: 15 to 45 minutes (sublingual); 30 minutes to 2 hours (swallowed)
- Duration: 2 to 6 hours
- Potency indicator: Milligrams of THC and/or CBD per dropper or per bottle
Tinctures allow precise dosing without inhalation — a valuable option for patients who prefer not to smoke or vape.
Topicals
Topicals are cannabis-infused creams, balms, lotions, and salves applied directly to the skin. Most topicals are non-intoxicating — cannabinoids interact with localized receptors without entering the bloodstream. Transdermal patches are the exception, designed to deliver cannabinoids systemically.
- Onset time: 15 to 60 minutes (localized); varies for transdermal
- Duration: 2 to 6 hours (localized); up to 12 hours (transdermal)
- Potency indicator: Milligrams of THC and/or CBD per unit
Patient Possession Limits
Oklahoma medical cannabis patients can possess the following amounts:
| Product | Limit |
|---|---|
| Flower (on person) | 3 ounces |
| Flower (at home) | 8 ounces |
| Concentrates | 1 ounce |
| Edibles / topicals | 72 ounces |
| Home plants | 6 mature + 6 seedlings |
No daily or monthly purchase caps. Home harvest counts toward the 8-ounce home limit.
Pre-Packaging Mandate (HB 2807)
Effective June 1, 2025, HB 2807 requires all cannabis products sold in Oklahoma dispensaries to arrive in tamper-evident, pre-packaged containers. This ends the previous practice of dispensaries packaging flower from bulk containers at the point of sale. The mandate improves product integrity, ensures consistent labeling, and strengthens the chain of custody tracked through Metrc.
For detailed comparisons of each method including bioavailability, safety profiles, and dosing strategies, see Methods of Consumption on TryCannabis.org.
OMMA-commissioned market study (June 2023) documented a 32:1 supply-to-demand ratio. Wholesale flower prices fell from $2,229/lb (2020) to $915/lb (mid-2022). HB 2807 tamper-evident pre-packaging effective June 1, 2025. HB 4454 (2026) proposes 10 mg THC per serving edible limit.
Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority (OMMA)
For in-depth cannabis education, dosing guides, safety information, and research summaries, visit our partner site TryCannabis.org