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A Florida appeals court has ruled that the smell of cannabis alone is no longer sufficient grounds for law enforcement to search a vehicle, due to the availability of medical cannabis and hemp THC products in the state. This ruling reverses a 2021 decision and aligns the Fourth Amendment analysis for cannabis with other suspected contraband, making odor one factor among others to consider for probable cause.

Florida Court Says Cannabis Odor Not Grounds for Vehicle Searches

Oct 3, 2025

Graham Abbott

Ganjapreneur



An appeals court in Florida ruled on Wednesday that the smell of cannabis
is no longer grounds for law enforcement officers to search someone’s
vehicle, the News Service of Florida reports.

With nine other judges in agreement, the main opinion of the 2nd District
Court of Appeal, written by Judge Nelly Khouzam, argues that given the
current availability of medical cannabis and hemp THC products in the
state, the “mere odor [of cannabis] can no longer establish that it is
‘immediately apparent’ that the substance is contraband.”

“Accordingly, the plain smell doctrine can no longer establish probable
cause based solely on the odor of cannabis. Rather, we now align the Fourth
Amendment analysis for cannabis with the test that applies to other
suspected contraband, such that its odor is a valid factor to be considered
along with all others under the totality of the circumstances.” — Excerpt
from the opinion

In addition to the nine in agreement, three other judges concurred but
submitted separate opinions, and two judges dissented from the ruling.
Dissenting Judge Craig Villanti wrote that the state’s hemp and cannabis
policies “did not wholesale decriminalize the possession of marijuana,” and
highlighted concerns about impaired driving.

The ruling reverses a 2021 decision by the court that said police were
still allowed to search vehicles based on cannabis odor, according to the
report.

In January, another Florida appeals court overturned vehicle searches based
on an alert from a police K9 trained to detect cannabis.

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