Passengers With Medical Marijuana Can Now Carry It On Flights Under Updated TSA Guidance

Americans who use medical marijuana now have clearer guidance for domestic flights, after the TSA updated its airport screening rules.The update follows a narrower federal change in how some cannabis products are treated. The Justice Department said FDA-approved marijuana products and marijuana products handled through qualifying state medical marijuana licenses have been moved from Schedule I to Schedule III, while a wider review of marijuana’s federal status is still moving through a separate hearing process.

That does not mean cannabis is fully legal at the federal level. Recreational marijuana remains federally restricted, and even medical marijuana still sits in a legally complicated space. The change does, however, line up more closely with medical cannabis programs that already exist in many parts of the US, including 40 states and the District of Columbia.

That shift is now showing up in the way travelers are told to handle medical cannabis at the airport.For passengers, the key point is that this is not a free pass for anyone carrying weed. The update is about medical marijuana, and travelers may still have to deal with state laws, airport officers, and the TSA officer making the final call at security.

It also matters where someone is flying. A short domestic trip between places with medical marijuana programs is very different from trying to travel internationally with cannabis, which can still lead to serious legal trouble.

Can you bring cannabis on board US flights?

A quiet update on the TSA website now lists medical marijuana as allowed in both carry-on bags and checked luggage, with special instructions attached.

That is the headline detail getting attention, but it comes with limits. The TSA is not saying every passenger can bring cannabis onto any plane without questions, and the guidance still leaves room for officers to make decisions at the airport.

The safer way to read the update is simple: medical marijuana is now listed as allowed in both types of bags, but travelers still need to think about medical documentation, state law, and what happens if an officer decides to involve law enforcement.

The rule change comes after the Trump administration rescheduled medicinal cannabisGetty Stock Images
The updated guidance, which changed at the end of April, makes clear that the Transportation Security Administration is mainly focused on aviation safety. In other words, TSA officers are there to look for weapons, explosives, and other threats to passengers and planes.“TSA’s screening procedures are focused on security and are designed to detect potential threats to aviation and passengers,” the update reads.

“Accordingly, TSA security officers do not search for illegal drugs, but if any illegal substance or evidence of criminal activity is discovered during security screening, TSA will refer the matter to a law enforcement officer.”

What passengers still need to watch out for

The biggest catch is that this does not apply to recreational weed. Anyone thinking the new guidance means they can simply light up, vape, or carry cannabis casually through an airport could still run into problems before they even board.

Passengers also should not assume that a TSA listing cancels out every other law. Cannabis rules can change from state to state, and the airport where someone starts or ends their trip may matter as much as the flight itself.

That is why the update is useful, but still confusing. It gives medical cannabis patients clearer guidance for travel, while still leaving enough gray area that people should be careful with documents, packaging, and the amount they carry.

The policy change is strictly about medical marijuana, so anyone planning to blaze it up at 35,000ft should probably rethink that plan. Smoking or using cannabis on a plane is not what the TSA guidance is talking about.The TSA page also does not clearly spell out how much medical marijuana a passenger can bring. It adds that the final decision on what is allowed through the checkpoint rests with the TSA officer on duty, which means the same situation may not always play out the same way at every airport.

Lawyers who previously discussed cannabis on flights with SF GATE said passengers carrying smaller amounts are rarely prosecuted. Still, that does not mean there is no risk, especially if the amount looks too large for personal medical use. It is another reminder that flight rules can be full of details passengers do not always hear about.

He’s checking for security risks, not your stashCHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP via Getty Images
“Airport law enforcement will be notified if marijuana is discovered by a TSA officer during the security screening process of carry-on and checked baggage,” TSA spokesperson Lorie Dankers told the outlet.“Law enforcement officials will determine whether to initiate a criminal investigation or what steps — if any — will be taken.”

So the basic takeaway is that medical cannabis patients have clearer permission than before, but not total freedom. The TSA may not be looking for drugs as its main job, yet passengers can still be referred to local police if an issue comes up during screening.

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