Florida occupies an unusual position in U.S. cannabis policy. The state operates one of the country's largest medical cannabis programs by patient enrollment, yet possession of marijuana for non-medical use remains a criminal offense under state law. The dividing line is statutory, not cultural — and understanding exactly where that line sits is the difference between a routine dispensary visit and a third-degree felony charge.[1][6]
The legal medical program traces to Amendment 2, ratified by Florida voters in November 2016 with 71.3% support. The amendment added a constitutional right for qualified patients to use cannabis under physician supervision, and the Legislature implemented it the following year through Section 381.986 of the Florida Statutes — the controlling law for everything from physician certifications to dispensary licensure.[2][1]
Who qualifies, and how the card actually works
To purchase from a Florida dispensary, a patient needs an active Medical Marijuana Use Registry (MMUR) ID card issued by the Florida Department of Health's Office of Medical Marijuana Use (OMMU). Eligibility requires Florida residency, certification by a state-qualified physician for one of the statutorily named conditions — cancer, epilepsy, glaucoma, HIV / AIDS, PTSD, ALS, Crohn's disease, Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis, and "medical conditions of the same kind or class" determined by the physician — plus a $75 application fee paid annually to the Department of Health.[3][5]
The certifying physician, not the patient, initiates entry into the registry. Patients then complete the application themselves and typically receive a temporary digital approval within ten business days, followed by the physical card by mail. A card is valid for one year and must be renewed alongside a new physician recertification at least every 30 weeks.[5]
How the supply chain is structured
Florida is a vertically integrated market: every licensed Medical Marijuana Treatment Center (MMTC) must cultivate, process, and dispense its own product. There is no independent grower, processor, or testing tier as exists in Colorado or California. As of the most recent OMMU registry, 25 MMTCs hold active licenses, operating more than 600 dispensary locations between them across the state.[4]
That structure has practical consequences for patients. Pricing and product variety differ meaningfully between operators because each MMTC controls its full supply chain, and patients are free to fill prescriptions at any dispensary regardless of which physician issued the certification — there is no operator "lock-in." Most MMTCs also offer state-licensed home delivery, which is regulated under the same registry rules as in-store dispensing.[4][1]
What is still illegal
Adult-use (recreational) cannabis remains a crime in Florida. Possession of 20 grams or less is a first-degree misdemeanor; more than 20 grams is a third-degree felony, and cultivation or sale carry steeper penalties under Section 893.13. The 2024 ballot initiative known as Amendment 3, which would have legalized adult use, received 55.9% of the vote — short of Florida's required 60% threshold for constitutional amendments — and the prohibition therefore remains in force in 2026.[6]
The hemp and cannabinoid retail market — the smoke shops, vape stores, and convenience-store coolers selling Delta-8, Delta-9, and THCa products — operates under a separate legal framework administered by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) under the State Hemp Program, not the OMMU. These products are legal at the state level if they meet the federal 0.3% Delta-9-THC dry-weight threshold, but they are not regulated as medicine, are not subject to MMTC potency or pesticide testing requirements, and may be restricted further by pending Florida legislation.[7]
Why this directory exists
Most Florida cannabis information online is published by dispensaries marketing their own product, by physicians marketing certifications, or by national aggregators with limited visibility into Florida-specific rules. FloridaMJ exists to provide a non-commercial, statute-anchored reference: a verified directory of every licensed MMTC and dispensary location, plain-English guides to the law as it actually reads, and editorial coverage of regulatory changes as they happen — sourced exclusively to the Florida Legislature, the Department of Health, FDACS, and federal health agencies.[1][8]
