Cannabis Lawyers in Connecticut
12 cannabis attorneys serving Connecticut dispensaries, cultivators, manufacturers, and MSOs. Licensing with the Department of Consumer Protection, IRC Section 280E tax strategy, mergers and acquisitions, regulatory compliance, and cannabis-specific litigation.
Connecticut cannabis legal landscape
Connecticut launched recreational cannabis sales with a strong equity focus and publishes industry data through its open data portal. Connecticut is an emerging cannabis market with a recreational and medical framework regulated by the Department of Consumer Protection. Approximately 300 active cannabis licenses currently operate under CT rules, each subject to federal IRC Section 280E on top of state licensing and compliance requirements.
State tax note: Connecticut has decoupled from Section 280E for state income tax purposes, meaning operators can deduct ordinary business expenses on their Connecticut return even though those same expenses remain non-deductible federally. This is a significant legitimate savings most Connecticutcannabis attorneys coordinate with their client's CPA. Confirm the official state regulator page at portal.ct.gov/cannabis before filing.
12 Cannabis Attorneys Serving Connecticut
Vicente LLP
Cannabis Lawyers
One of the first US law firms specializing in cannabis since 2010. Ranked by Chambers and Best Lawyers.
Zuber Lawler
Cannabis Lawyers
Named Cannabis Law Firm of the Year by Marijuana Venture. Representing leading cannabis clients since 2006.
Harris Sliwoski
Cannabis Lawyers
International cannabis law firm known for the Canna Law Blog. Offices in Portland, Seattle, LA, and San Francisco.
Duane Morris LLP
Cannabis Lawyers
National leader in cannabis law ranked by Chambers, Legal 500, and Law360.
Greenspoon Marder LLP
Cannabis Lawyers
Among the first national law firms to establish a dedicated Cannabis Law practice group.
Fox Rothschild LLP
Cannabis Lawyers
Full-service firm with notable cannabis focus. Publishes the In The Weeds cannabis law blog.
Foley & Lardner LLP
Cannabis Lawyers
Nationwide firm with strong cannabis IP and transactional practice. Chambers-ranked.
Cozen O'Connor
Cannabis Lawyers
Multistate firm handling transactional issues, financings, and acquisitions for cannabis operators and investors.
Perkins Coie LLP
Cannabis Lawyers
Team of 120+ cannabis attorneys. Led legal team for Coalition for Cannabis Scheduling Reform.
Dickinson Wright PLLC
Cannabis Lawyers
Full-service cannabis law practice covering licensing, compliance, and corporate formation across multiple states.
Clark Hill PLC
Cannabis Lawyers
Absorbed Hoban Law Group (premier cannabis firm since 2008) in 2021. International law firm with deep cannabis heritage.
Feuerstein Kulick LLP
Cannabis Lawyers
Well-regarded boutique handling high-profile cannabis M&A deals and licensing.
Working on 280E or COGS allocation?
19 cannabis CPA firms also serve Connecticut. Most cannabis legal matters in Connecticut are stronger when a cannabis-specialized attorney and CPA work together, especially on Section 280E strategy, dual-entity structuring, and IRS audit defense.
Cannabis CPAs in Connecticut→Frequently Asked Questions - Connecticut Cannabis Lawyers
What does a cannabis lawyer in Connecticut actually do?+
Cannabis attorneys in Connecticut handle licensing applications and renewals with the Department of Consumer Protection, corporate structuring (entity selection, MSO roll-ups, dual-entity 280E strategies), real estate and zoning issues specific to CT local opt-out rules, regulatory response work when operators receive inquiries or deficiency notices, cannabis M&A, employment and labor peace agreements, and cannabis-specific litigation. Most Connecticut cannabis attorneys also work closely with a cannabis CPA because tax and compliance issues overlap heavily.
How much does a cannabis lawyer in Connecticut cost?+
Cannabis legal fees in Connecticut vary by scope. Licensing application work is often billed as a flat fee (engagement letters should break out application prep, local-government coordination, and state filings separately). Ongoing regulatory and corporate work is typically hourly. M&A transactions use a combination of hourly plus success fee. Connecticut cannabis attorneys generally charge above standard corporate rates because of the specialized expertise, audit risk, and federal-state conflict. Always request a written engagement letter with scope, deliverables, and fee caps before starting.
Does Connecticut follow IRC Section 280E for state taxes?+
No. Connecticut has decoupled from IRC Section 280E at the state level, which means cannabis operators CAN deduct ordinary and necessary business expenses on their Connecticut state tax return even though those same expenses remain non-deductible federally. This is a legitimate state-level tax benefit that a non-cannabis-specialist CPA may overlook. Confirm current status with your CPA because state rules evolve.
What regulator oversees cannabis licensing in Connecticut?+
Department of Consumer Protection is the primary cannabis regulator in Connecticut. Their website is https://portal.ct.gov/cannabis. Connecticut cannabis attorneys interact with this agency for license applications, renewals, transfers, and compliance matters. Local governments in Connecticut may also impose zoning, buffer, and licensing requirements on top of the state framework, which is why many operators retain a lawyer familiar with both state and local rules.
Do I need a lawyer based in Connecticut specifically?+
For state licensing, local zoning, and CT-specific administrative work, a lawyer licensed in Connecticut or with a documented track record before the Department of Consumer Protection is strongly recommended. For federal 280E tax strategy, multi-state M&A, cannabis trademark, and general corporate work, a nationwide cannabis specialist is typically sufficient. Many operators use both: a Connecticut attorney for state-level matters and a national cannabis firm for federal and multi-state issues.
How do I verify a cannabis lawyer is actually licensed in Connecticut?+
Every state has a public attorney lookup maintained by its state bar or supreme court. Search by name to confirm the attorney is in good standing, check for any public discipline history, and verify the firm's listed address matches the bar record. CannaBizGuide does not license or verify attorneys - always confirm licensure directly with the state bar before engaging.