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23 April 2025

DEA Final Order To Reschedule Marijuana From Schedule I To Schedule III Effective Immediately

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The DEA has issued a final order moving certain marijuana classifications from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act, creating new compliance requirements and tax relief opportunities for state-licensed medical marijuana operators.
United States Cannabis & Hemp
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Today is a momentous day in marijuana history. The DEA issued a final order on Apr. 22nd, moving certain marijuana classifications from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). Interestingly, the legal milestone here isn’t the usual state medical/recreational rulemaking process, it’s the United States’ treaty obligations under the United Nations Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs (1961). If you’re a cannabis operator, medical professional, researcher, or investor, this one matters. Now is the time to reach out to a Clark Hill cannabis attorney to help you navigate through this latest evolution.

What the Final Order Actually Does

The key thing to understanding is this order doesn’t reschedule all marijuana. It only moves specific marijuana categories into Schedule III:

  • FDA-approved drug products containing marijuana (e.g., products containing naturally derived Δ9-THC from the cannabis plant);
  • Marijuana extracts contained in FDA-approved products or subject to a state medical marijuana license; and
  • Marijuana and marijuana extracts are subject to a qualifying state-issued medical marijuana license. This classification will have the greatest effect on the industry.

Everything else, unlicensed bulk marijuana, anything not in an FDA-approved product, synthetic THC and all recreational marijuana, remains in Schedule I. These marijuana categories remain illegal under federal law!

Key Consequences: What Changes Now

  • Section 280E Tax Relief for State Licensees: This is probably the most immediately impactful piece for licensed operators. The order makes clear that state medical marijuana licensees are no longer constrained with the § 280E deduction ban, that provision only applies to Schedule I and II substances. There’s no retroactive effect from this order itself, though the Acting AG is encouraging the Treasury Secretary to consider giving businesses some retroactive relief. This isn’t a formal tax ruling, so consult with your Clark Hill tax attorney about what it means for your specific situation and past years.
  • New DEA Registration Pathway: Good news! If you hold a state medical marijuana license, you can now apply for a federal DEA Schedule III registration through a new expedited process. Just submit proof of your state license. If you file within 60 days of publication, DEA has to process your application within six months, and you can keep operating under your state license while you wait. Give us a call to get ahead of this.
  • Import/Export Permit Requirement: The order also amends 21 CFR Part 1312 to add an import/export permit requirement for the Schedule III marijuana. If you’re moving covered marijuana products across borders, you’ll need a DEA permit. A Clark Hill international trade attorney can walk you through what that looks like in practice.
  • Reduced Criminal Penalties (Partial): Some penalties tied to scheduling will go down, that is a real but limited win. The mandatory minimums under 21 U.S.C. § 841, which are based on drug quantity, aren’t touched by this change. Those stay exactly where they are.
  • Recreational Marijuana Remains Federally Illegal: The order does not affect recreational marijuana in any state. We want to be clear on this: if you’re in the recreational space, nothing about your federal exposure changes. Manufacturing, distribution, and possession of recreational marijuana is still a federal crime, still carrying Schedule I penalties.
  • State-Law Compliance Accommodations: One thing the order gets right is trying to cut down on duplicative compliance headaches. State-issued medical marijuana certifications are enough to authorize dispensing. For the most part, you can lean on your state-law requirements for labeling, packaging, disposal, and security instead of layering on separate federal standards; albeit this may be likely to change as federal regulations evolve.

Immediate Action Items for Clark Hill Clients

  • State-licensed cannabis operators should apply for DEA registration within 60 days of this order’s Federal Register publication. That window gets you into the expedited lane and lets you keep operating while your application is pending. Don’t miss it!
  • If you haven’t already, get Clark Hill tax counsel involved now. The § 280E picture has shifted, and there may be real money on the table for prior tax years depending on your circumstances, especially if Treasury moves on retroactive relief.
  • If your business touches imports or exports of covered marijuana products, flag that for your Clark Hill compliance team now. Those transactions require a DEA permit going forward.
  • Researchers sourcing marijuana from state licensees: make sure both you and your supplier have current DEA registrations. That’s what keeps you protected from civil and criminal exposure under the CSA.
  • And keep one eye on Congress. Lawmakers could expand this, roll it back, or change the rules entirely — the regulatory ground here is still shifting.

Marijuana rescheduling is officially here and there are now actionable items for marijuana operators to take to ensure they stay in compliance with federal law.

The Clark Hill Cannabis Industry Group will provide periodic updates as the DEA and other agencies issue guidance. We’ll be watching this closely and will keep you informed as the process unfolds.

To discuss with our attorneys how your business can take advantage of this change in federal policy please contact us at the following:

Clark Hill PLC Clark Hill PLC
Craig Bennett Small, Esq. Karl Frederic, Esq.
csmall@clarkhill.com kfrederic@clarkhill.com
720-249-2341 609-785-2972

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

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