Current Laws and Where Kentucky Could Be Headed to Expand Access
As Kentucky’s medical cannabis program matures, dispensary operators are increasingly encountering patients from other states seeking to make purchases. Our firm advises cannabis licensees across multiple jurisdictions, and we have seen firsthand how verifying patient documentation and monitoring purchase limits can become a compliance pitfall for even well-intentioned operators. Kentucky’s rules around visiting patients and qualifying conditions are more restrictive than many other states, and getting them wrong puts your license at risk.
This article breaks down what you need to know—from the legal requirements to practical verification steps to state-specific red flags—and closes with a look at how Kentucky’s program compares to other states, including the ongoing push to expand qualifying conditions.
Key Restriction: Purchase Limits for Visiting Patients
Before diving into the verification process, every operator should have this rule front and center: visiting patients may purchase no more than a 10-day supply in any 8-day period. Kentucky law also requires dispensary staff to verbally inform every visiting patient of this limit at the point of sale—a step that is easy to overlook in a busy retail environment but essential for compliance.
Two Ways a Visiting Patient Can Qualify
- Option A — KY Visiting Qualified Patient Card: Issued by the Kentucky Cabinet. If valid and unexpired, no additional out-of-state documents required.
- Option B — Out-of-State Card + Medical Documentation: Patient must present both a valid state-issued medical cannabis card and medical documentation showing a diagnosis of a Kentucky-qualifying condition.
The Verification Process
Step 1: Review Out-of-State Card
Confirm the card meets all of the following criteria:
- Issued by an official state medical cannabis program
- Current and not expired
- Appears legitimate and unaltered
- Lists the patient’s legal name
- Includes a program registry number
Do not accept the following as a medical cannabis card:
- Doctor recommendations or referral forms
- Telehealth-only “digital cards”
- Documents not issued by a state program
Step 2: Verify Identity and Age
- Patient must be 18 or older
- Photo on a government-issued ID must match the individual
- Name on the ID must match the medical cannabis card
- Acceptable IDs include a driver’s license, passport, state ID, or military ID
Step 3: Review Medical Documentation
The documentation must include an express diagnosis of a Kentucky-qualifying condition. Acceptable forms of documentation include:
- Medical records
- Visit notes or physician summaries
- Written certifications
- History and physical reports
Do not accept vague notes without a diagnosis, records lacking a qualifying condition, or telehealth letters without diagnosis detail.
Look Out for Red Flags
| Category | State(s) | What to Know |
| No Valid Cards Exist — Do Not Accept | Louisiana | Does not issue registry ID cards; practitioner referrals do not qualify |
| Texas | No registry cards issued; only Compassionate Use Registry exists | |
| Alabama, Nebraska | Programs authorized but not yet issuing cards | |
| No Medical Program — Reject Immediately | Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, South Carolina, Tennessee, Wisconsin, Wyoming, American Samoa | No medical cannabis program exists |
| Common Mix-Ups — Card Required | California | Must see actual registry ID card, not just a physician recommendation |
| Hawaii | Must have the 329 Registry ID card, not just a doctor’s note | |
| Illinois | Provisional letters only valid for 90 days; check expiration | |
| New York | Cards valid for one year; ask for signed certification showing validity period | |
| Utah | Non-resident patient cards only valid for 21 days |
Kentucky Qualifying Conditions
The patient’s medical documentation must show a diagnosis of one of the following:
- Any type or form of cancer (regardless of stage)
- Chronic, severe, intractable, or debilitating pain
- Epilepsy or any other intractable seizure disorder
- Multiple sclerosis, muscle spasms, or spasticity
- Chronic nausea or cyclical vomiting syndrome
- Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Key Takeaways for Operators
Dispensary licensees must ensure that:
- All front-line staff are thoroughly trained on the verification process and can identify non-qualifying documentation.
- When documentation is questionable, the default is to decline the sale pending further verification.
Check the Kentucky Office of Medical Cannabis (kymedcan.ky.gov) website regularly for current guidance as the program evolves.
The Bigger Picture: How Kentucky Compares to Other States
Why include a national comparison in an article about day-to-day compliance? Because understanding where Kentucky stands relative to other programs helps operators appreciate both the current regulatory landscape and the direction the industry may be headed.
Visiting Patient Reciprocity:
- Kentucky requires both an out-of-state card and medical documentation proving a Kentucky-qualifying condition, plus a 10-day/8-day purchase cap with mandatory verbal disclosure.
- Delaware & Maine broadly accept any valid out-of-state card (Maine caps visitors at 2.5 oz in 15 days).
- New Mexico allows “reciprocal participants” to purchase with proof of authorization from another state—no separate application required.
- Ohio requires formal reciprocity agreements with states that have comparable eligibility rules.
Qualifying Conditions:
Most states with medical cannabis programs have broader lists of qualifying conditions than Kentucky—and some give physicians significant discretion:
- Illinois — Over 50 conditions, plus physician discretion to certify any condition.
- Missouri — Practitioners may certify “any chronic, debilitating, or other medical condition,” including hepatitis C, Huntington’s disease, and sickle cell anemia.
- New Jersey — Includes anxiety, migraines, dysmenorrhea, and opioid use disorder.
- New York — Practitioners may certify “any other condition” at their discretion.
- California, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, and New Mexico — All recognize over a dozen qualifying conditions including Alzheimer’s disease, autism, Crohn’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and glaucoma—none of which currently qualify in Kentucky.
The Push to Expand Kentucky’s List:
In February 2026, the Kentucky Office of Medical Cannabis (OMC) formally recommended legislation to expand the qualifying conditions list to include 16 additional conditions—including ALS, Parkinson’s disease, Crohn’s disease, fibromyalgia, arthritis, HIV/AIDS, glaucoma, and terminal illness. OMC noted that the Kentucky Board of Physicians and Advisors unanimously approved these conditions, citing their collective medical opinion that “medicinal cannabis may have a positive medical, therapeutic, or palliative impact on Kentuckians suffering from these conditions.”
OMC estimated that expanding the list would provide relief for approximately 430,000 Kentuckians. Despite this formal recommendation and support from patient advocacy groups, the General Assembly has not yet acted on the proposal. Industry stakeholders interested in advocating for expanded access may wish to monitor developments in upcoming legislative sessions and engage with policymakers on this issue.
Questions?
If your business has questions about visiting patient verification, regulatory compliance, advocacy efforts, or any other aspect of Kentucky’s medical cannabis program, please reach out to a member of the Dentons cannabis group.