Massachusetts Regulators Approve Emergency Rules to Raise Marijuana License Caps and Purchase Limits
- The Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission used an emergency process to update regulations, increasing Adult-use retail license caps from three to six and raising daily cannabis purchase limits from 1 to 2 ounces, as required by Ch. 65 of the Acts of 2026.
- Only Social Equity Businesses (SEBs) are eligible for the sixth retail license during the first 12 months after application acceptance, with a maximum of five licenses for non-SEBs during this period.
- The emergency regulations will be effective for three months while the Commission conducts a public comment process, including a live hearing on July 30 and a written feedback period from July 3 to July 30, after which the regulations may become permanent.
- The Commission plans additional regulatory updates in the fall related to Ch. 65 milestones, modernization of cannabis testing protocols, and revisions to the Medical Use of Marijuana Program reflecting potential federal rescheduling.
In an effort to meet deadlines prescribed in Ch. 65 of the Acts of 2026, the Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission today used an emergency process to update regulations to increase license ownership caps and daily purchasing limits.
Ch. 65 gave the Commission 60 days from when the governor signed the law on April 19 to increase the Adult-use retail license cap from three to six licenses. Under the statute, however, only Social Equity Businesses (SEBs) are eligible to receive a sixth retail license during the first 12 months after the Commission begins accepting applications pursuant to Ch. 65. During that 12-month period, the Commission may not grant more than five retail licenses to any licensee that is not an SEB. Although daily purchase limits increased immediately on April 19 from 1 to 2 ounces of cannabis, Commission regulations under 935 CMR.500 will now be updated to formally reflect the increase.
“The Commission is moving quickly to update regulations to meet a specific deadline within Ch. 65, but this is just the beginning of a comprehensive policymaking process that will unfold over the next year,” Commission Chair Chris Harding said. “Ten years after voters approved an adult-use cannabis market in Massachusetts, today’s update and those coming in the future will ensure access to a safe, equitable cannabis industry for consumers, patients, business leaders, and taxpayers well into the future.”
“Starting in the fall, Commissioners and staff will make additional regulatory policy updates prescribed by Ch. 65, and other initiatives, like working to modernize cannabis testing protocols and considering revisions to the Medical Use of Marijuana Program in light of federal rescheduling,” Commission Executive Director Travis Ahern said. “The important regulatory amendments made today begin a period of intense work toward modernizing the cannabis market in Massachusetts.”
Following Wednesday’s unanimous vote (3-0), the Commission will file the emergency regulations with the Secretary of the Commonwealth. The regulations will be in effect temporarily for three months as the Commission completes the public comment process, which will include a live public hearing on July 30 and a public comment period to receive written feedback from July 3 to July 30. Compliance with the public comment process will make the emergency regulations permanent.
The emergency regulations approved Wednesday will:
Once the emergency regulations process is completed, the Commission will continue to update internal infrastructure before it can accept new applications related to the increased license cap.
The Commission anticipates amending regulations again in the fall to make policy changes related to other milestones in Ch. 65, plus other initiatives related to testing protocols and the Medical Use of Marijuana Program.
For more information, visit MassCannabisControl.com, contact the Commission by phone (774-415-0200) or email (Commission@CCCMass.com), or follow the agency on Facebook, X, and LinkedIn.