Thank you for visiting and shopping at Clearwaterkratom.com

Following are the current legal statuses of Kratom throughout the United States:

Green=Legal | Red=Banned | Read through to see Legal status on certain Counties (Find your State below!)

Alabama —Banned. As of May 10, 2016, (SB226) makes kratom a schedule 1 controlled substance. Advocacy and education efforts are underway with the regulators and legislators of jurisdiction.

Alaska —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Arizona —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Arkansas —Banned. As of February 1, 2016 it is banned. It was added to the controlled substance list using AR code § 5-4-201 (a)(1)(A)(i). Advocacy and education efforts are underway with the regulators and legislators of jurisdiction.

California —Legal except in San Diego. SD passed ordinance 20657 on June 15, 2016.

Colorado —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Connecticut —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Delaware —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Florida —Legal except for Sarasota CountyHB183 has been filed, which would make kratom illegal. In 2016, (HB 73 and SB 11) did not pass and died in committee.

Georgia — Legal. (HB 783) would have banned Kratom. Thanks to the very hard work of many people, AKA members, and AKA Team Georgia, Kratom was removed from the bill.

Hawaii —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Idaho —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Illinois —Legal to adults. No known active or pending legislative action. Legislation (HB 5526) during the 2014 legislative session makes the sale of Kratom illegal to minors under 18 of age.

Indiana —Banned. Indiana SB0305 incorrectly identifies Kratom as a synthetic drug and thus scheduled Kratom as part of synthetic controlled substances legislation. Advocacy and education efforts are underway with the regulators and legislators of jurisdiction.

Iowa —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action. Legislation that would have criminalized kratom (HB 640 / HF 2355) was introduced and referred to the Iowa House Public Safety Committe; however, the bill was not passed during the 2014 legislative session.

Kansas —Illegal, schedule I. (SB282)

Kentucky —Legal. (SB136) would have made kratom a controlled substance. Thanks to the very hard work of many people, including AKA members, the bill did not pass.

Louisiana —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action. Legislation that would have scheduled kratom (HB 174) was amended and specifically removed language that would have banned one of the primary alkaloids in Kratom, 7-OH (hydroxymitragynine). This amendment ultimately ensured Kratom’s continued legality in the state of Louisiana as of today.

This amendment was born out of advocacy and education efforts of AKA members and Kratom users across the state of Louisiana. Advocacy and education continue with the regulators and legislators of jurisdiction to thwart future legislation.

Maine —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Maryland —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Massachusetts —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Michigan —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action. Legislation that would have scheduled kratom (HB 5707) was not passed during the 2014 legislative session.

Minnesota —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Missouri —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Mississippi —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Montana —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action

Nebraska —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Nevada —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

New Hampshire — Legal to sell to individuals 18 years and older per (SB540). Thanks to the advocacy and education efforts of AKA members, State Rep. Shem Kellogg and Kratom users across the state of New Hampshire reached an agreement, putting an age restriction of 18+.

New Jersey —Legal. Assemblyman Ron Dancer introduced legislation (AB 4431) in May of 2015 that would criminalize the manufacture, sale, and possession of substances containing Kratom. Since the bill was introduced, it was referred to the Law and Public Safety Committee. The Committee has not taken any action at this time. Advocacy and education efforts are underway with the regulators and legislators of jurisdiction.

New Mexico —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

New York — Legal. A231 was introduced by Assembly Member Aileen Gunther on January 5th, 2017. Gunther also introduced legislation (A8670S6345 and A9068), which prohibits the sale or distribution of kratom. A9121 puts a 21 and over age restriction. For New York, it’s a year-round session, but we’ll keep you up to speed should any developments occur.

If you live in NY, please message or call your state Assembly and Senate members. Find yours here: http://nyassembly.gov/mem/search/.

State your opposition to ANY bill that prohibits the sale or possession of kratom. More details to come.

North Carolina —Legal. (SB830) had been introduced into legislation that would have scheduled kratom. Instead it only restricts its use to people over the age of 18. Thanks to the very hard work of many people, including AKA members, the bill did not pass.

North Dakota —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Ohio —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Oklahoma —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action. Legislation that would have scheduled kratom (HB 2666) was not passed during the 2014 legislative session.

Oregon —Legal. SB 518 has been introduced. The state board of Pharmacy will conduct a study.

Pennsylvania —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Rhode Island —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

South Carolina —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

South Dakota —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Tennessee —Banned. Tennessee defines Kratom, Mitragyna speciosa, as a controlled substance (Pub. Ch. No. 161). Advocacy and education efforts are underway with the regulators and legislators of jurisdiction.

Texas —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Utah —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Vermont —Banned. Vermont classifies one of the primary alkaloids in Kratom, 7-OH (hydroxymitragynine), as a regulated drug (Title 18 V.S.A. § 4205), effectively banning Kratom in the state of Vermont. Advocacy and education efforts are underway with the regulators and legislators of jurisdiction.

Virginia —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Washington —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

West Virginia —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.

Wisconsin —Banned. Wisconsin classified the primary alkaloids in Kratom, mitragynine and 7-OH (hydroxymitragynine), as Schedule I (Wis. Stat. § 961.14), effectively banning Kratom in the state of Wisconsin. Advocacy and education efforts are underway with the regulators and legislators of jurisdiction.

Wyoming —Legal. No known active or pending legislative action.