Home β€Ί News β€Ί Vermont Cannabis Tourism 2026: What Out-of-Staters Need to Know
Guides June 13, 2026 Β· 8 min read

Vermont Cannabis Tourism 2026: What Out-of-Staters Need to Know

Updated
Vermont Cannabis Tourism 2026: What Out-of-Staters Need to Know β€” Guides
Evan Lafayette Editorial

Burlington-based writer covering Vermont's cannabis industry since 2023. Visits every licensed dispensary in the state, tests products, and reads the CCB rulebook so you don't have to.

TL;DR: Vermont sells recreational cannabis to any adult 21+ with valid government ID β€” no Vermont residency required. Current limits are 1 oz of flower or 5g of concentrate per transaction; S.278 (pending Governor Phil Scott's signature as of June 2026) would raise this to 2 oz effective July 1. You cannot consume in public, in most hotels, or in a vehicle, and transporting cannabis home across any state line or through BTV Airport is a federal offense β€” no exceptions.

Burlington became the most accessible cannabis tourism destination in northern New England the day Vermont's recreational market opened in October 2022. The purchasing rules are genuinely visitor-friendly. The consumption and transport rules are not forgiving. This guide covers every rule that matters before you walk into a dispensary.

Can Out-of-State Visitors Buy Cannabis in Vermont?

Yes, without restriction. Vermont's Cannabis Control Board imposes no residency requirement. Any adult who is 21 or older with a valid, non-expired government-issued photo ID can purchase recreational cannabis at any licensed Vermont dispensary. Accepted IDs include a driver's license from any U.S. state, a U.S. passport, or a passport card. A Canadian passport or provincial ID is also accepted.

Out-of-state visitors have identical purchase limits and pay identical prices to Vermont residents. There is no tourist surcharge, no separate queue, and no additional paperwork.

Purchase and Possession Limits in 2026

Current limits per transaction at a single dispensary:

  • Flower: 1 ounce (28 grams)
  • Concentrates / hash: 5 grams
  • Edibles: Up to 500mg THC total; individual packages capped at 50mg / 5mg per serving under Vermont CCB rules

These are per-transaction limits, not daily caps. You can visit multiple dispensaries in one day. However, possessing more than 1 oz of flower at any time remains illegal without a Vermont medical card, regardless of how many stores you visited.

S.278 update: Vermont's legislature passed S.278, which would double limits to 2 oz of flower and 10g of concentrate. As of early June 2026, the bill was awaiting Governor Phil Scott's signature β€” if signed, most provisions take effect July 1, 2026. Check the dispensary directory or call ahead if you're visiting after that date to confirm current posted limits.

Where Can You Legally Consume Cannabis in Vermont?

This is the rule most visitors misread. Vermont permits cannabis consumption only on private property, with the owner's permission. In practice:

Location Legal?
Private residence or yard (owner or with explicit permission) βœ“ Yes
Vacation rental or Airbnb where host explicitly permits cannabis βœ“ Yes β€” verify before booking
Hotel room βœ— Prohibited at most hotels
Public parks, Church Street Marketplace, waterfront, sidewalks βœ— No
Inside or adjacent to a vehicle βœ— No
Cannabis lounge or consumption cafΓ© βœ— None exist in Vermont

Vermont has no licensed social consumption venues as of June 2026. S.278 includes a permit framework for temporary cannabis events, but no permanent lounges are authorized. Most downtown Burlington hotels ban cannabis smoking outright due to fire alarm and odor liability; edibles consumed discreetly are tolerated at many properties but not guaranteed. Call ahead and ask specifically about their cannabis policy β€” don't assume.

Can You Fly Home with Cannabis Through BTV?

No β€” and this carries real legal risk. Burlington International Airport (BTV) is federal property, and all commercial aviation is governed by federal law. Cannabis remains a Schedule I controlled substance under the Controlled Substances Act regardless of Vermont state law. TSA agents are federal employees operating under federal authority; if they encounter cannabis during a security screening, they refer it to local law enforcement.

This applies regardless of:

  • Whether your destination state also has legal cannabis
  • Product type (flower, edibles, vape cartridges, concentrates β€” all prohibited)
  • Whether you're carrying on or checking luggage
  • Your medical patient status in any state

The dispensaries closest to BTV Airport are under 10 minutes away if you want to purchase on your way into Burlington β€” but do not plan to take any product back through the terminal. Consume what you buy in Vermont before traveling home.

Is Cannabis Delivery Available for Visitors?

No. The Vermont House removed a delivery pilot provision from S.278 before final passage. As of June 2026, there is no authorized recreational cannabis delivery in Vermont. Medical delivery is available to registered Vermont patients, but out-of-state visitors are not eligible for a Vermont medical card. You must purchase in person at a licensed dispensary.

Vermont Cannabis Taxes: What Visitors Actually Pay

The shelf price you see at a Vermont dispensary does not include taxes. Vermont's combined cannabis tax burden:

  • Cannabis excise tax: 14% (applied to all adult-use products)
  • Vermont state sales tax: 6%
  • Burlington local option tax: 1% (applies within Burlington city limits)
  • Combined rate in Burlington: approximately 21%

Vermont's average flower price runs around $11–12 per gram before tax β€” significantly higher than Massachusetts ($4.03/g average as of early 2026) due to Vermont's younger, less competitive market. If you're driving from MA or ME, Vermont is not a price play; it's a convenience purchase for what you'll consume locally. See the state-by-state price and tax comparison for full numbers, or the Vermont cannabis tax guide for a detailed breakdown of how excise revenue is spent.

Burlington-Area Dispensaries by Neighborhood

Burlington's dispensaries cluster in three walkable zones, with Winooski (5 minutes by car over the Winooski Bridge) adding more options:

Church Street / Downtown core β€” The densest cluster for foot-traffic tourists:

  • Float On Dispensary (136Β½ Church St) β€” Open until midnight Fri–Sat; broad selection; the most tourist-accessible shop in the city
  • True 802 Cannabis (132 Church St, 2nd Floor) β€” Vermont-grown craft flower; good for buyers prioritizing local sourcing
  • Garcia's Cannabis Collective (97 Church St) β€” Solid everyday selection; convenient daytime hours
  • Bern Gallery (135 Main St) β€” Dispensary plus smoke shop; useful if you need accessories alongside product

Waterfront / Pearl St area β€” Minutes from Lake Champlain:

  • Green Haven Herbals (18 Pearl St) β€” Premium flower and craft edibles; convenient before a waterfront walk. See the dispensaries near Burlington waterfront guide.
  • The Herb Closet (196 Pearl St) β€” Latest hours in Burlington (until 2 AM Fri–Sat); reliable for late-night visits after dinner on the Hill

South End β€” Better for concentrate shoppers and early risers:

  • Heybud Dispensary (291 Saint Paul St) β€” Opens 8 AM daily; specializes in concentrates and rosin
  • Upstate Elevator Dispensary (699 Pine St) β€” In-house Vermont-grown brand; opens 8:30 AM Mon–Sat

For the full directory with real-time hours, addresses, and an interactive map, visit the Burlington dispensary directory.

Practical Tips for Visitors Staying in Hotels

  • Call ahead about cannabis policy β€” Most Burlington chain hotels prohibit smoking on premises; many tolerate edibles and vaporizers if used discreetly, but verify before assuming
  • Airbnbs are typically more flexible β€” Many Vermont hosts explicitly permit cannabis; filter by house rules or message the host directly before booking
  • Keep purchases in original dispensary packaging β€” Vermont dispensaries sell in child-resistant, labeled packaging; this protects you legally and satisfies hotel staff if questioned
  • Don't store product in a rental car overnight β€” Open cannabis containers in a vehicle are illegal even when parked; store in your hotel room or lodging, not the glove compartment
  • Consume or discard before heading to the airport β€” Budget time to finish or properly dispose of any remaining product before checking out; do not attempt to pack it

Frequently Asked Questions

Can out-of-state visitors buy cannabis in Vermont? +
Yes. Vermont does not require residency to purchase recreational cannabis. Any adult 21 or older with a valid government-issued photo ID β€” from any U.S. state, a U.S. passport, or a Canadian passport β€” can purchase at any licensed Vermont dispensary. Out-of-state visitors have identical purchase limits and pay identical prices to Vermont residents.
What are Vermont's cannabis possession limits for tourists in 2026? +
Tourists follow the same limits as Vermont residents: up to 1 ounce of flower or 5 grams of concentrate per transaction. Possession is capped at 1 ounce of flower at any time. Vermont's S.278 legislation, pending Governor Phil Scott's signature as of June 2026, would raise these limits to 2 ounces and 10 grams effective July 1, 2026.
Can you consume cannabis in a hotel room in Vermont? +
Most Burlington hotels prohibit cannabis smoking on premises due to fire alarms and odor liability. Edibles and discreet vaporizers are tolerated by some properties but prohibited by others. Airbnb rentals are generally more flexible β€” many Vermont hosts explicitly allow cannabis. Verify before booking, and never assume smoking is permitted in your room without asking.
Can you fly home with cannabis purchased in Vermont? +
No. Burlington International Airport (BTV) is federal property and TSA operates under federal law. Cannabis is a Schedule I controlled substance federally β€” TSA refers cannabis found during screening to law enforcement. This applies to all product types (flower, edibles, concentrates, vapes), carry-on and checked luggage, and regardless of whether your destination state also has legal cannabis.
Is cannabis delivery available for tourists in Vermont? +
No. Vermont does not have legal recreational cannabis delivery as of June 2026. The Vermont House removed a delivery pilot provision from S.278 before final passage. Medical delivery exists for registered Vermont patients, but out-of-state tourists cannot obtain a Vermont medical card. Purchases must be made in person at a licensed dispensary.
How much is Vermont's combined cannabis tax rate in Burlington? +
Vermont charges a 14% cannabis excise tax plus a 6% state sales tax. Within Burlington city limits, a 1% local option tax also applies, bringing the effective combined rate to approximately 21%. Vermont shelf prices average around $11–12 per gram of flower before tax, so plan for roughly 21% on top of posted menu prices.

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