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“Today is a significant day for the commission and Rhode Island. This milestone represents the culmination of years of work and collaboration.”
By Christopher Shea, Rhode Island Currant
For nearly three years, prospective business owners have eagerly waited for the date they could join Rhode Island’s budding retail cannabis market. That day is now here.
At the start of the Cannabis Control Commission’s monthly meeting Friday afternoon, chairperson Kimberly Ahern announced regulators are now accepting online applications for two dozen new retail licenses through late December.
Under the 2022 act that legalized recreational cannabis, the commission can offer 24 new licenses to retailers, with six reserved for social equity applicants and another six reserved for worker-owned cooperatives.
The commission opened the initial screening process for social equity applicants on August 29. Social equity applicants are defined as those who were adversely affected by the War on Drugs, including residents in census tracts of five Rhode Island municipalities identified as “disproportionately impacted” areas from past cannabis prohibition.
As of Friday, Rhode Island Cannabis Administrator Michelle Reddish said 89 prospective social equity applicants have already applied for screening. Certification is expected to be complete some time in November.
All recreational licenses will be spread throughout six geographic zones, with a maximum of four stores per zone.
Regulators will accept submissions through 4 p.m. on Monday, December 29. Ahern said Commission and Cannabis Office staff will provide technical assistance resources guidance for prospective applicants.
“Today is a significant day for the commission and Rhode Island,” Ahern said. “This milestone represents the culmination of years of work and collaboration.”
It’s certainly been a slow road for the state to establish its recreational cannabis market. Over a year passed before the three-member commission was impaneled, which then needed to hire staff to draft proposals and conduct a review of rules adopted in other states.
That left sales to the state’s seven pre-existing medical dispensaries, which have been allowed to sell recreational cannabis under hybrid licenses.
Those seven stores sold a combined $118 million worth of cannabis products last year, according to state data. Through the end of August 2025, existing hybrid retailers have made nearly $80 million in sales.
Regulations were finally approved by the commission in April, taking effect in May.
The inaugural rules require applicants to first be screened to ensure they meet qualifications before being placed in a lottery held in each of six designated geographic zones.
All prospective retailers are required to pay an application fee of $7,500 and a yearly $30,000 licensing fee. But the application fee will be waived for the first year for approved social equity applicants—whose qualifications for the speciality license through the end of September.
This story was first published by Rhode Island Currant.
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