Cannabis Education
Cannabis-Friendly Tourism: Top Destinations and What to Know
A plain-English guide to cannabis friendly tourism: what adults 21+ should know, how to think about it, and where to go for the next level of detail.
·2 min read

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## The Short Answer
Cannabis tourism has grown alongside legalization. For adults 21 and older planning travel with cannabis in the picture, the key rule remains: the law that matters is the law where you physically are. You can consume legally purchased cannabis in a state where it's legal, but you cannot transport it across state lines, even between two legal states. This piece covers the tourism landscape.
## The US Cannabis-Tourism Map
Major adult-use destinations:
**Colorado.** The original 2012 legalization state; mature tourism infrastructure, clear consumption rules, lodging options.
**California.** Broad adult-use access, consumption lounges in some cities.
**Nevada.** Las Vegas has seen cannabis tourism grow, including licensed consumption lounges.
**Michigan.** Active adult-use market; growing tourism around Traverse City, Detroit.
**Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey.** Northeast corridor with adult-use; established dispensary networks.
**Washington, Oregon.** Northwest with legal markets; outdoor-recreation combinations common.
**Illinois.** Adult-use with Chicago-area retail.
## International Destinations
**Canada.** Federal legalization since 2018. Legal to purchase and consume as a visitor of legal age (19 in most provinces, 18 in Alberta and Quebec).
**Netherlands.** "Coffee shops" operate in a long-standing tolerated framework (not strictly legal, but enforced that way).
**Uruguay.** Legal but primarily for residents.
**Germany, Malta, Luxembourg.** Legal with varying tourist-access rules.
**Thailand, others.** Emerging legal or semi-legal frameworks; research the specific destination before you go.
## What "Cannabis-Friendly" Lodging Means
Several categories of lodging accommodate cannabis in legal states:
- **Cannabis-friendly hotels and inns.** Permit consumption in designated rooms or outdoor areas.
- **Cannabis-themed retreats and wellness centers.** Integrate cannabis into programming.
- **Airbnb and short-term rentals.** Host-specific policies; read the listing.
- **Standard hotels.** Most prohibit consumption on property regardless of state law.
## What Tourists Cannot Do
- **Transport across state lines.** Federal interstate drug trafficking. No exceptions for adult-use or medical cardholders.
- **Fly with cannabis.** Federal law applies to airports. TSA is federal.
- **Consume in public** in states where it's prohibited (most states).
- **Drive after consumption.** Every US state enforces DUID.
## The Safer Model
The workable tourism pattern:
1. Arrive in a legal state without cannabis.
2. Visit a licensed dispensary in that state.
3. Consume legally on cannabis-friendly property.
4. Before leaving, finish or dispose of what you bought.
5. Don't take any home.
## International Travel
Bringing cannabis into or out of the United States is a federal crime. Destination countries vary widely. Do not assume that "legal at home" translates to legal abroad, even if the destination also has legal cannabis.
## Where to Go Next
Related reading: [cannabis and travel](/blog/cannabis-and-travel-can-you-fly-with-weed-or-cross-state-lines), [cannabis consumption lounges](/blog/cannabis-consumption-lounges-what-they-are-and-where-to-find-them), and [is cannabis legal in my state](/blog/is-cannabis-legal-in-my-state-a-state-by-state-guide-to-marijuana-laws).
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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).*