Legality tracker

Kratom legality by state.

Medically reviewed by Dr. Irvine Russell · Updated April 2026

Direct answer

Kratom is federally legal in the United States, but regulated differently across 50 states and DC. 6 states ban kratom outright: Alabama, Arkansas, Indiana, Rhode Island, Vermont, Wisconsin. 5 states have passed the Kratom Consumer Protection Act (KCPA) — Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, Oklahoma, Utah — requiring labeling, purity testing, and age restrictions. 5 states have significant city/county bans despite state-level legality. The rest are legal for adults with varying age requirements.

6 Banned states
5 KCPA-Regulated
5 With City Bans
35 Fully Legal
Legend:
Legal
KCPA-Regulated
Restricted
Banned
AL banned

Alabama

AK legal

Alaska

AZ kcpa

Arizona

18+ KCPA
AR banned

Arkansas

CA restricted

California

+ city bans
CO restricted

Colorado

+ city bans
CT legal

Connecticut

DE legal

Delaware

DC legal

District of Columbia

FL restricted

Florida

+ city bans
GA kcpa

Georgia

18+ KCPA
HI legal

Hawaii

ID legal

Idaho

IL restricted

Illinois

18+ + city bans
IN banned

Indiana

IA legal

Iowa

KS legal

Kansas

KY legal

Kentucky

LA legal

Louisiana

ME legal

Maine

MD legal

Maryland

MA legal

Massachusetts

MI legal

Michigan

MN legal

Minnesota

MS restricted

Mississippi

+ city bans
MO legal

Missouri

MT legal

Montana

NE legal

Nebraska

NV kcpa

Nevada

18+ KCPA
NH legal

New Hampshire

18+
NJ legal

New Jersey

NM legal

New Mexico

NY legal

New York

21+
NC legal

North Carolina

18+
ND legal

North Dakota

OH legal

Ohio

OK kcpa

Oklahoma

18+ KCPA
OR legal

Oregon

21+
PA legal

Pennsylvania

RI banned

Rhode Island

SC legal

South Carolina

SD legal

South Dakota

TN legal

Tennessee

21+
TX legal

Texas

UT kcpa

Utah

18+ KCPA
VT banned

Vermont

VA legal

Virginia

21+
WA legal

Washington

WV legal

West Virginia

WI banned

Wisconsin

WY legal

Wyoming

The Kratom Consumer Protection Act

The KCPA is a model state law promoted by the American Kratom Association. It typically requires: (1) minimum age 18 or 21 for purchase, (2) product labeling with mitragynine content, (3) no contaminants above specified thresholds, (4) no adulteration with synthetic alkaloids, (5) no marketing to minors.

Five states have enacted versions: Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, Oklahoma, Utah. More states have KCPA bills in active consideration. This legislation aims to provide a safe, regulated marketplace as an alternative to prohibition.

Enforcement Watch · July 2025

In July 2025, the FDA issued warning letters to multiple firms marketing 7-hydroxymitragynine products and announced intent to restrict 7-OH as a controlled substance. Leaf kratom remains federally legal. Status is evolving — see the FDA timeline.