Yes, CBD oil is legal in Oklahoma if derived from hemp containing ≤0.3% THC, aligning with the 2018 Farm Bill and Oklahoma’s SB 238 (2019). The Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority (OMMA) oversees licensing, while the Department of Agriculture, Food, and Forestry (ODAFF) enforces hemp cultivation rules. Retail sales require OMMA-approved testing and labeling, with strict penalties for non-compliance. As of 2026, pending legislation may tighten THC thresholds for smokable CBD products, requiring businesses to monitor OMMA’s forthcoming guidance.
Key Regulations for CBD Oil in Oklahoma
- THC Limits: Products must contain ≤0.3% delta-9 THC by dry weight; total THC (including THCA) cannot exceed 0.3% post-decarboxylation. OMMA’s 2024 testing protocols enforce this via third-party labs.
- Licensing & Testing: All CBD products sold in Oklahoma require OMMA registration and must pass potency, microbial, and heavy metal tests. Unregistered sales face misdemeanor charges under 63 O.S. § 420 et seq.
- Retail Restrictions: CBD oil may not be marketed as a dietary supplement or ingested in public spaces where smoking is prohibited. Local municipalities (e.g., Oklahoma City, Tulsa) may impose additional zoning restrictions on retail outlets.