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Getting your license approved is just the beginning — what comes next determines whether you'll survive your first year.
Oklahoma's commercial cannabis regulations are unforgiving. Between Metrc tracking violations, uncredentialed employees, and technical building code failures, most compliance mistakes happen during facility setup — when growers are juggling a dozen vendors, burning through capital, and racing to get operational.
The growers who launch successfully understand something critical: post-licensing compliance isn't just paperwork. It's a coordinated effort across multiple state agencies — OMMA, the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (OBNDD) , and local Authorities Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) for fire and building codes. Miss one requirement from one agency, and your entire operation can grind to a halt.
This checklist covers every mandatory step you must complete before your first plant hits soil.
What's at stake: Incomplete regulatory registration means your license isn't truly active — and any product you grow can't legally be sold.
This phase covers the mandated regulatory steps that finalize your license and integrate your business into the state tracking system.
All growers must register with the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (OBNDD). If you acquired your license through transfer, you must apply for a new OBNDD registration after OMMA approval.
The OMMA license term for a newly transferred license begins upon OBNDD registration approval. The annual OBNDD fee is $2,500 — a 400% increase from the previous $500.
Action Steps:
Submit OBNDD registration immediately after license approval
Budget for the $2,500 annual fee (this caught many operators off guard)
If you acquired a transferred license, understand your license term doesn't start until OBNDD approves your registration
All OMMA-licensed businesses must activate a Metrc account and be fully compliant. The owner or key administrator must complete Metrc's New Business class to become credentialed.
Metrc violations trigger $500 fines per occurrence and jeopardize your entire operation. This isn't optional — it's the backbone of Oklahoma's compliance system.
Action Steps:
Activate your Metrc account immediately
Complete the required New Business class before handling inventory
Ensure inventory records in Metrc match your point-of-sale (POS) system daily
If reporting zero inventory, use the Operational Exception function by the 15th day of each month
Keep records from the preceding month ready for reporting
Submit a Foreign Financial Interest Attestation within 60 days of license approval or risk your license.
The Requirement: .
Action Steps:
One attestation is required for each commercial license
Mark your calendar — missing this 60-day deadline puts your license at immediate risk
Submit through OMMA's licensing portal
If you've owned the licensed premises for less than five years, you must provide proof of a surety bond for at least $50,000
If you can demonstrate land ownership for a minimum of five years prior to applying, you're exempt from the bond requirement.
Action Steps:
If you don't qualify for the ownership exemption, secure a surety bond immediately
Understand the bond covers expenses for restoring the property (if abandoned or your license is revoked)
OMMA may require a higher bond amount (based on reclamation requirements)
Keep proof of bond or ownership documentation readily accessible
Commercial growers operating an outdoor production facility must register with the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, Food, and Forestry (ODAFF) as an environmentally sensitive crop owner.
Action Steps:
Review the Sensitive Crop Guide and Map provided by OMMA
Submit ODAFF registration if operating outdoors
Keep registration documentation on file
What's at stake: Building and fire code violations trigger stop-work orders, failed inspections, and facility closures. Get this wrong and you'll burn tens of thousands in retrofitting costs.
This phase covers location, security, and building code standards enforced by OMMA, local municipalities, and the Oklahoma State Fire Marshal.
Your property line must not be within 1,000 feet of any public or private school's property line.
This is a foundational licensure requirement. Violating it means immediate disqualification.
Action Steps:
Verify distance measurements before signing any lease or purchase agreement
Get written confirmation from your surveyor or title company
Keep documentation proving compliance on file
Submit a Certificate of Compliance from your city or county confirming you're not violating local zoning or safety codes.
In areas without zoning, the County Clerk may certify that no applicable codes or regulations exist.
Action Steps:
Contact your local planning or zoning department immediately
Request a Certificate of Compliance
If in an unzoned area, get County Clerk certification
Keep the certificate readily available for OMMA inspection
All medical marijuana buildings must have a Certificate of Occupancy (COO). You're responsible for compliance with state fire, building, and electrical codes, including those adopted by the Oklahoma Uniform Building Code Commission (OUBCC).
You must comply with the most recent versions of the Oklahoma Uniform Building Code, International Building Code, and International Fire Code.
Action Steps:
Obtain or verify your building has a valid COO
For renewals, an affidavit of premises compliance usually suffices (unless there's been a change of use or occupancy)
Schedule inspections with your local building department
Budget for code upgrades if your facility was built for a different use
If using flammable gases (butane, propane) or flammable liquids for extraction, the process must occur in an AHJ-approved C1D1 room or building. Post-processing requires a C1D2 environment.
This is the most expensive build-out mistake growers make. These specialized environments require design services from an Oklahoma Licensed Professional Engineer.
Action Steps:
If planning extraction, hire an Oklahoma Licensed Professional Engineer immediately
Get AHJ approval before beginning construction
Budget significantly more than standard construction — C1D1/C1D2 rooms are extremely expensive
Don't attempt extraction without proper classification or you'll face immediate shutdown
Security Alarm: Each building must have a security alarm system transmitting a signal directly to a central station, police agency, or 24-hour control station.
Buildings must have self-closing, self-locking doors constructed of substantial material.
Egress doors must be readily openable from the egress side without a key or special knowledge (fire code requirement).
Action Steps:
Contract with a commercial security company for alarm monitoring
Ensure the system transmits to one of the approved monitoring locations
Install self-closing, self-locking doors on all entry points
Verify egress compliance with fire marshal before final inspection
Any outdoor or greenhouse facility must be surrounded by a fence and entry gates. The fence must be at least eight feet high (ground to top), constructed of metal chain link (minimum nine gauge) or similarly secure material.
OMMA has filed license revocation petitions for fencing violations. This isn't a suggestion — it's a hard requirement they're actively enforcing.
Action Steps:
Install eight-foot minimum fencing around the entire perimeter
Use metal chain link (at least nine gauge) or equivalent secure material
Ensure the fence is in good repair and obscures the facility from outside view
Install secure entry gates
Document installation with photos for your records
Post signage at the perimeter of your property that is at least 18 inches by 24 inches with standardized font at least 2 inches tall on a white background.
Business name, address, phone number, and OMMA license number.
Failure to comply has led to license revocation petitions filed by OMMA.
Action Steps:
Create compliant signage before operations begin
Install at property perimeter (not just building perimeter)
Verify all required information is included and legible
Use weather-resistant materials
Take photos as documentation
Electrical systems must be sized and installed according to the National Electric Code (NEC). Fire codes prohibit extension cords or power strips as permanent wiring.
Grow facilities have extremely high electrical demand. Undersized systems or improper wiring can trigger fire marshal shutdowns or worse — electrical fires.
Action Steps:
Hire a licensed electrician familiar with commercial grow operations
Size electrical systems for full canopy load (not just startup load)
Never use extension cords or power strips as permanent wiring
Install fire sprinkler systems if your fire area exceeds 12,000 sq ft or creates a story without openings (F-1 Occupancy classification)
Schedule electrical and fire marshal inspections before going live
What's at stake: Uncredentialed employees, improper documentation, and failed testing protocols can trigger immediate fines, product seizures, and license suspension.
This phase covers employee vetting, product handling, tracking, and waste disposal requirements.
Every employee involved in growing cannabis must obtain an official OMMA-issued credential. Credentials are valid until January 31 of the following year.
Licensed businesses are responsible for ensuring employees have valid credentials. The liability is on you, not the employee.
Action Steps:
Require all employees to submit credential applications immediately upon hire
Applications must include a state background check (OSBI, dated within 30 days) and an Attestation Regarding National Background Check
Never allow uncredentialed employees to handle cannabis
Track expiration dates and ensure renewals happen before January 31 each year
Associate all employee credentials with your commercial license through the licensing portal's Employee Roster function.
Action Steps:
Keep an updated roster of all credentialed employees in the licensing portal
Add new employees immediately after credential approval
Remove terminated employees promptly
Use OMMA Verify (ommaverify.ok.gov) to check credential validity regularly
It is unlawful for licensed commercial growers to knowingly employ undocumented immigrants.
Violations may result in misdemeanor charges, fines, imprisonment, license revocation, and denial of future license applications.
Action Steps:
Verify employment authorization for all employees using I-9 forms
Keep I-9 documentation on file and organized
Never knowingly hire undocumented workers — the consequences are severe
Maintain meticulous records of every plant, batch, sale, and waste disposal activity for several years. Test results and related records must be retained for at least two years.
Records must be available for inspection at any time. OMMA conducts annual audits, and OBNDD, OSBI, and the Attorney General have full investigative authority.
Action Steps:
Create a record-keeping system from day one
Track every plant from seed to sale
Keep test results for a minimum of two years
Organize records for easy inspector access
Consider digital backup systems to prevent data loss
Starting June 1, 2025, all cannabis must be pre-packaged before it leaves your facility (HB 3361).
No more bulk transfers. Everything must be in final packaging with proper labeling before transport.
Action Steps:
Source compliant packaging materials
Ensure packaging meets OMMA's standards including potency information, ingredient disclosures, and warnings
Set up packaging workflows before the June 1, 2025 deadline
Budget for packaging equipment and materials
Do not sell or transfer any medical marijuana from a harvest batch until samples have passed all required tests (microbials, heavy metals, pesticides, and potency).
Action Steps:
Contract with OMMA-approved testing labs immediately
Test every harvest batch before transfer or sale
Understand which failures allow remediation and which mean disposal
Budget for testing costs and potential batch losses
If prohibited product is sold or transferred, immediately notify OMMA and initiate a recall
OMMA conducts an annual compliance inspection and annual audit for every licensed business. The OBNDD, OSBI, and the Attorney General have full authority to investigate and enforce violations.
OMMA may employ secret shoppers to inspect licensed businesses. Unannounced inspections are allowed.
Failure to permit inspections or noncompliance can lead to license suspension or revocation.
Action Steps:
Keep your facility inspection-ready at all times
Maintain organized records accessible for immediate review
Train staff on how to respond to inspectors (be cooperative, never obstruct)
Schedule regular internal audits to catch issues before inspectors do
Understand that refusing or impeding inspections is grounds for immediate license action
Post-licensing setup is where most Oklahoma cannabis operations either succeed or fail. The growers who launch successfully don't cut corners — they methodically work through every requirement, coordinate across multiple agencies, and build compliance into their operations from day one.
This checklist represents hundreds of hours working with Oklahoma operators. If you're facing any of these setup challenges, we're here to help you get it right the first time.
Success in Oklahoma cannabis starts with disciplined post-licensing setup and built-in compliance from day one.