🌾 OklahomaOMMA Compliance

Oklahoma Cannabis Labeling & Packaging Requirements

Oklahoma's September 2025 labeling update changed requirements for all cannabis products. Make sure your labels are compliant before your next OMMA inspection.

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Required Label Elements (2025 Update)

Oklahoma now requires: dispensary name and license number, product name, net weight, cannabinoid content (THC and CBD per serving and per package), batch number, QR code linking to COA, universal symbol, and a 21+ age statement.

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QR Code Requirement (New in 2025)

The September 2025 update added a mandatory QR code requirement. Every product must have a QR code that links directly to the COA for that specific batch. Generic website links are not acceptable.

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Universal Symbol

All Oklahoma cannabis products must display the state-approved universal symbol. The symbol must meet minimum size requirements and be printed in the required color. Products without the correct symbol are non-compliant.

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Child-Resistant Packaging

All cannabis products must be in child-resistant packaging. Edibles must be in opaque packaging that does not resemble non-cannabis food products. Packaging that appeals to children is prohibited.

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COA Requirements

The COA linked by the QR code must be from an OMMA-approved laboratory and must show cannabinoid content for the specific batch. COAs must be current — OMMA considers COAs older than 12 months to be expired.

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Prohibited Claims

Labels may not make health claims, disease treatment claims, or FDA-regulated claims. Statements like 'treats anxiety' or 'reduces pain' are prohibited and trigger immediate OMMA action.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What changed in Oklahoma's cannabis labeling requirements in September 2025?

The September 2025 update added a mandatory QR code requirement linking to the batch-specific COA, updated the cannabinoid content disclosure requirements to show both per-serving and per-package amounts, and clarified the universal symbol size and color requirements.

Do I need to relabel products that were compliant before September 2025?

If your products do not have a QR code linking to the batch-specific COA, they are now non-compliant under the September 2025 update. You should work with your supplier to get updated labels or relabel products before your next OMMA inspection.

What is an OMMA-approved laboratory?

OMMA maintains a list of approved testing laboratories on its website. Only COAs from OMMA-approved labs are acceptable for compliance purposes. Before stocking any product, verify that the COA is from a lab on OMMA's approved list.

Can I sell a product if the QR code on the label doesn't work?

No. If the QR code does not link to a valid, current COA, the product is non-compliant. OMMA inspectors scan QR codes during inspections. A broken or invalid QR code is treated the same as a missing COA.

What are the penalties for selling products with non-compliant labels in Oklahoma?

OMMA can seize non-compliant products immediately. Dispensaries face fines of $500 to $5,000 per non-compliant product. Repeat violations or willful non-compliance result in escalating fines and potential license action.

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Get Alerted When Oklahoma Labeling Rules Change Again

CannaLogIQ monitors OMMA labeling requirements nightly. When the September 2025 QR code update happened, our subscribers knew before their next inspection.

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