Cannabis Education
Cannabis Expungement: How Past Convictions Are Being Cleared
A plain-English guide to cannabis expungement guide: what adults 21+ should know, how to think about it, and where to go for the next level of detail.
·3 min read

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## The Short Answer
"Expungement" is the legal process of clearing a conviction from a person's public record. Many states with adult-use cannabis have paired legalization with expungement programs that allow people with prior cannabis-related convictions to clear those records. For adults 21 and older who may have a prior cannabis conviction, expungement is worth investigating, the employment, housing, and civic consequences of a cannabis record can be significant, and eligibility is often broader than people expect.
## Why Expungement Matters
A cannabis possession conviction can affect:
- **Employment.** Background checks flag convictions; some positions exclude candidates with drug convictions.
- **Housing.** Landlords and public housing agencies run background checks.
- **Education.** Federal financial aid has historically had drug-conviction restrictions (reformed in recent legislation, but historical effects linger).
- **Professional licensing.** Medicine, law, teaching, and other licensed fields review criminal history.
- **Immigration.** Prior cannabis convictions can affect visa status, naturalization, and inadmissibility.
- **Firearms.** Federal law prohibits firearm ownership for those with drug convictions, and federal policy on cannabis and firearms remains strict even in legal states.
## State Expungement Programs
Many adult-use states have passed expungement programs alongside legalization:
- **Automatic expungement.** Some states expunge qualifying convictions automatically without petition (requires state action on records).
- **Petition-based expungement.** Some states require the individual to file a petition.
- **Resentencing.** Some states allow reduced penalties on convictions still carrying active sentences.
Eligibility varies by state. Typical eligibility criteria:
- Possession-only convictions.
- Below a certain quantity.
- No violent offense associated.
- Certain age at conviction.
More serious cannabis-related convictions (trafficking, distribution at scale, cases with other charges) often are not eligible.
## New York Specifically
New York's MRTA included provisions for automatic expungement of certain cannabis convictions. The New York State Office of Court Administration has been working through record clearing at scale. Patients with eligible convictions may also be able to petition for additional clearing if automatic processing has not yet reached their case.
## How to Check Your Status
For consumers who may have an eligible conviction:
1. **Check your state's expungement program.** Most have online lookup tools or FAQs.
2. **Request a criminal history report.** Your state's equivalent of a "background check" will show what's on record.
3. **Consult a lawyer or legal aid.** Many states have free legal-aid organizations specializing in expungement.
4. **Follow up if automatic expungement should apply.** Systems don't always process perfectly; if your record should be cleared and isn't, an active petition can address the gap.
## Federal Records
State expungement doesn't clear federal records. Cannabis convictions in federal court generally require separate federal processes, which have been more limited than state-level programs. Pardons at the federal level (including President Biden's 2022 mass pardon for simple federal cannabis possession) have begun addressing this.
## Where to Go Next
Related reading: [social equity in cannabis](/blog/social-equity-in-cannabis-what-it-means-and-why-it-matters), [is cannabis legal in my state](/blog/is-cannabis-legal-in-my-state-a-state-by-state-guide-to-marijuana-laws), and [federal cannabis laws explained](/blog/federal-cannabis-laws-explained-where-rescheduling-and-reform-stand).
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*This article is consumer education for adults 21+. Nothing here is medical, legal, or financial advice. Cannabis laws vary by state, always verify your state's current rules and, for health questions, consult a licensed clinician. For regulated New York retail, verify licensing via the OCM QR-code system at [cannabis.ny.gov](https://cannabis.ny.gov).*