KS

Kansas

Cannabis is decriminalized in Kansas β€” small amounts carry a civil penalty, not a criminal charge. It is not fully legal.

Decriminalized
N/A
Annual Sales
N/A
Active Licenses
N/A
Tax Rate
< 1 oz (misdemeanor, decriminalized)
Possession Limit
● LIVE STATUS Updated 4 days ago  ·  April 1, 2026
Legislative Pressure Β· 1 bills tracked
β–² 0% Pro-Access Β· 0 bills 1 bills Β· 100% Restrictive β–Ό
Legislature is actively pushing to restrict access.
Legislative Tracker

Kansas Bills Tracker

1 bill tracked
SB497 β–Ό Restrictive
In Committee
Adding kratom to schedule I of the uniform controlled substances act and making conforming amendments to the definition of fentanyl-related controlled substance in the criminal code.
Intro
Cmte
Vote
Gov
Law
πŸ• House Hearing: Wednesday, March 11, 2026, 1:30 PM Room 112-N - CANCELED Β· Mar 11, 2026
πŸ—³ Vote: MAR 5
SB497 adds kratom to Kansas' Schedule I, restricting access for consumers and patients, and impacts operators by criminalizing its sale and possession. View full bill text β†’
Overview

Marijuana is decriminalized in Kansas, meaning small amounts carry civil fines rather than criminal charges. Kansas has decriminalized small amounts of cannabis, reducing penalties for possession of less than 1 ounce to a misdemeanor with no jail time. The state does not have a medical cannabis program.

What This Means for You
  • Small amounts are decriminalized β€” civil fine, not arrest
  • Retail sale remains illegal
  • Possession limit: < 1 oz (misdemeanor, decriminalized)
  • Home grow: Not permitted

Latest Kansas Cannabis Developments