Cannabis Testing Labs in Arkansas

We're building our Arkansas testing lab directory. Labs are regulated by Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission.

Data source: Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission

Arkansas cannabis testing overview

Arkansas voters approved medical cannabis in 2016 and the program launched commercial sales in 2019. The market is concentrated among a limited number of vertically integrated operators. All cannabis products sold in Arkansas must be tested for potency, contaminants, microbials, and (for concentrates) residual solvents by a lab licensed under Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission. Look for ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation and currently valid state licensure when choosing a lab.

No labs listed yet

Know a licensed cannabis testing lab in Arkansas?

Submit a Lab

Frequently Asked Questions

How many cannabis testing labs are in Arkansas?+

We are still building our Arkansas testing lab directory. Cannabis testing in Arkansas is regulated by Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission. If you know of a licensed lab that should be listed, please submit it.

What tests are required for cannabis products sold in Arkansas?+

Arkansas cannabis products must typically be tested for cannabinoid potency (THC, THC-A, CBD, CBD-A and often other cannabinoids), terpene profile (sometimes optional), pesticides, heavy metals, residual solvents (for concentrates), microbial contaminants, mycotoxins, and moisture content. Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission sets the specific analyte panels and action limits. Retest rules, homogeneity sampling, and label claim tolerances are also state-specific. See our testing requirements by state guide for the current AR panel.

How much does cannabis testing cost in Arkansas?+

Full-panel compliance testing in Arkansas typically ranges from a few hundred to over a thousand dollars per sample depending on matrix type (flower vs concentrate vs edible), panel scope, and turnaround. Bulk pricing and volume discounts are common for multi-state operators. R&D testing (not for compliance) is usually less expensive. Get quotes from multiple labs and confirm they can test ALL required matrices before committing.

What accreditations should a Arkansas cannabis lab have?+

At minimum, look for ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation from a recognized body (A2LA, PJLA, ANAB, or similar). Arkansas may also require specific state-level certification or licensing from Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission. Some operators also look for ORELAP, EMLAP, or TNI certifications, particularly for specific analyte categories. Verify accreditation status directly with the accrediting body - do not rely on lab marketing alone.

What is the typical cannabis testing turnaround time in Arkansas?+

Standard compliance testing turnaround is usually 5-10 business days from sample receipt to reported Certificate of Analysis (COA). Rush service (48-72 hours) is available at most labs for a premium. Complex matrices (distillates, edibles with unusual excipients) and retest scenarios often take longer. Plan testing windows into your release schedule, especially around regulated harvest or batch-release deadlines.

How do I read a cannabis Certificate of Analysis (COA)?+

A cannabis COA reports pass/fail for each required analyte category plus quantified values (potency % and contaminant levels). Key things to check: batch number, sample intake date, testing methodology references (LC-MS/MS, GC-MS, qPCR), and that the lab's name and accreditation number match a currently-licensed lab. Beware of COAs from unaccredited or out-of-state labs. See our How to Read a Cannabis COA guide for a detailed walkthrough.