Marijuana has not been legalized for medical or recreational purposes in North Carolina. However, it is legal on the lands controlled by the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (ECBI). The lone ECBI weed dispensary currently offers no delivery service. For the rest of the state, legislative actions are ongoing to legalize cannabis for medical and recreational purposes and may allow weed delivery to eligible persons in North Carolina.
No. Medical marijuana delivery is illegal in North Carolina because medical cannabis use is still prohibited in the state. However, medical marijuana could be legalized soon in the state as legislation, Senate Bill 3 (SB 3), is currently under debate. Also known as the North Carolina Compassionate Care Act, SB 3 seeks to permit qualifying patients aged 21 years or older in the state to use cannabis for medical purposes. The single weed dispensary legalized by the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI) does no deliver medical marijuana to customers’ addresses.
No. North Carolina residents are prohibited from using recreational cannabis or engaging in any recreational marijuana activity, including weed delivery services. A bill introduced to legalize adult-use cannabis in the state, Senate Bill 765, is still pending. If passed, SB 765 would allow adults in North Carolina to possess, use, and purchase marijuana for recreational purposes. Also, under SB 765, Section 18D-404(b)(2)(d), licensed retail marijuana stores would be permitted to sell recreational cannabis using weed delivery services. Residents living on EBCI land may buy and consume recreational marijuana but cannot have them delivered.
While you can order weed on the website of the dispensary licensed by the EBCI, you must pick your order in person at the dispensary. Online purchase of weed is not allowed in the rest of the state because North Carolina has yet to legalize cannabis for medical or recreational usage.
North Carolina prohibits purchasing marijuana or marijuana products by any means, including through delivery services.
It is illegal for anyone, regardless of age, to use, possess, or purchase marijuana or use weed delivery services in North Carolina.
Currently, no individual or entity can operate a weed delivery service in North Carolina. Marijuana remains a Schedule VI controlled substance under the North Carolina Controlled Substances Act, and it is illegal to sell or deliver it to anyone in the state. Weed delivery is also not offered by the weed dispensary located on EBCI lands.
No legal marijuana delivery service operates in North Carolina because the substance is still considered illegal in most of the state and not delivered by the EBCI-licensed dispensary.
Marijuana delivery service is still prohibited in North Carolina.
No. Weed delivery service is not available in any North Carolina city because medical and recreational marijuana are illegal in the state.