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Kentucky's top medical marijuana regulator expects dispensaries to be stocked and ready for sale by next month, with two of the state's 16 cultivators now operational. The first sales are likely to occur at The Post dispensary in Beaver Dam. Over 19,000 patient certifications have been approved, but initial supplies will be scarce and prices higher. Governor Beshear anticipates operations before the end of the year, having already approved the first dispensary and a licensed cultivator. He has also urged federal action on rescheduling marijuana and protecting medical cannabis patients' gun rights, while signing executive orders to waive renewal fees and protect patients obtaining cannabis out-of-state. A new online directory for dispensaries has been launched, and over 100 cities and counties approved local cannabis business ordinances last year.

Kentucky Medical Marijuana Dispensaries Should Be Stocked With Products Ready For Sale By Next Month, Top State Official Says

Sep 15, 2025

Tom Angell

Marijuana Moment



Kentucky’s top medical marijuana regulator said he expects that dispensary
shelves will be stocked with products ready for sale to patients by next
month.

Two of the state’s 16 medical cannabis cultivators are now operational,
according to Cannon Armstrong, executive director of Kentucky’s Office of
Medical Cannabis (OMC).

“If everything goes according to plan for them, I think that they’ll have
medical cannabis that will be ready to harvest and be put on the shelf, you
know, by October,” he told Spectrum News 1. “So we’re moving and we’re
finally getting to a point where we’re, these patients are going to receive
this medication sooner than later.”

Armstrong predicted that the first sales will likely occur at a dispensary
in Beaver Dam called The Post.

“I think you’re going to see the first products out there based upon just
how it’s shaken out,” he said. “You know, someone may step up their
timeline and may get out there before that or get product from there and
place it somewhere else in the state.”

As of now, OMC has approved more than 19,000 patients certifications,
Armstrong said.

He added that medical cannabis supplies should be relatively scarce as the
market first launches, and said that as a result initial prices will be
higher than they eventually will be.

Earlier this month, Gov. Andy Beshear (D) said he thought medical marijuana
would be available to Kentucky patients by the end of 2025.

“The medical marijuana program is moving forward,” he said at a press
briefing at the time.

“I think most of our dispensaries now have their home address [and] are set
about where they’re going to be, but [for] some of the inspections that
have to happen in dispensaries, they have to have product that’s there,” he
said. “So I do believe they’ll be operating before the end of the year.”

Those comments came roughly a month after the governor announced that the state’s
first medical cannabis dispensary has officially been approved for
operations, calling it “another step forward as we work to ensure
Kentuckians with serious medical conditions have access to the medicine
they need and deserve.

He previously touted an earlier “milestone” in the state’s forthcoming
medical marijuana program, with a licensed cultivator producing “the first
medical cannabis inventory in Kentucky history.”

Beshear’s office has said that other cannabis licensees, including
processors and testing labs, are expected to become operational soon.

In July, Beshear sent a letter to President Donald Trump, urging him to
reject congressional spending bill provisions that would prevent the
Justice Department from rescheduling marijuana.

In the letter to the president, he emphasized that a pending proposal to
move cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III under the Controlled
Substances Act (CSA) is something “you supported in your presidential
campaign.”

“That process should be allowed to play out. Americans deserve leadership
that won’t move the goalposts on them in the middle of the game,” Beshear
said, noting that he was among the tens of thousands who submitted public
comments in favor of the reform after it was initiated under the Biden
administration, “demonstrating broad public interest in rescheduling.”

“I joined that effort because this is about helping people. Rescheduling
would provide suffering patients the relief they need,” the governor said.
“It would ensure communities are safer—because legal medical products
reduce the illicit market. It would provide new, meaningful research on
health benefits.”

Beshear also mentioned a letter to DEA he signed onto last year urging
rescheduling, “because the jury is no longer out on marijuana. It has
medical benefits.”

Back on the state level, the governor recently said he acknowledges that
“it’s taken longer than we would have liked” to stand up the industry since
he signed medical marijuana legalization into law in 2023.

In recognition of that delayed implementation, he recently signed an
executive order to waive renewal fees for patients who get their cards this
year so that they don’t get charged again before retailers open. And
another order he signed providing protections for qualified patients who
obtain medical marijuana outside of Kentucky “will stay in place.”

Beshear separately announced in May that the state has launched a new
online directory that lets people see where medical cannabis dispensaries
will be opening near them.

He emphasized that the state has been working to deliver access to patients
“at the earliest possible date,” and that involved expediting the licensing
process. The governor in January also ceremonially awarded the
commonwealth’s first medical marijuana cards.


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Meanwhile, the governor sent a letter to Kentucky’s congressional
delegation in January, “urging them to take decisive action to protect the
constitutional rights of our law abiding medical cannabis patients” by
repealing the federal ban on gun possession by people who use marijuana.

That came after bipartisan Kentucky senators filed legislation that
similarly called on the state’s federal representatives to take corrective
action, which Beshear said he supports but would like to see even more
sweeping change on the federal level.

The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF)
warned Kentucky residents late last year that, if they choose to
participate in the state’s medical marijuana program, they will be
prohibited from buying or possessing firearms under federal law.

As far as the implementation of the state’s medical cannabis law goes,
Beshear said in his State of the Commonwealth address in January that patients
will have access to cannabis sometime “this year.” He also later shared
tips for patients to find a doctor and get registered to participate in the
cannabis program.

Health practitioners have been able to start assessing patients for
recommendations since the beginning of December.

While there currently aren’t any up-and-running dispensaries available to
patients, Beshear has further affirmed that an executive order he signed in
2023 will stay in effect in the interim, protecting patients who possess
medical cannabis purchased at out-of-state licensed retailers.

During last year’s November election, Kentucky also saw more than 100
cities and counties approve local ordinances to allow medical cannabis
businesses in their jurisdictions. The governor said the election results
demonstrate that “the jury is no longer out” on the issue that is clearly
supported by voters across partisan and geographical lines.

The post Kentucky Medical Marijuana Dispensaries Should Be Stocked With
Products Ready For Sale By Next Month, Top State Official Says appeared
first on Marijuana Moment.

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