Is Delta-10 THC Legal in Alaska?
Is delta-10 legal in Alaska? Restricted to AMCO-licensed marijuana retailers under 3 AAC 306 (effective Nov 3, 2023). Federal H.R. 5371 narrows hemp further Nov 12, 2026.
Is delta-10 legal in Alaska? Restricted to AMCO-licensed marijuana retailers under 3 AAC 306 (effective Nov 3, 2023). Federal H.R. 5371 narrows hemp further Nov 12, 2026.
Last reviewed: May 20, 2026
Restricted at hemp retail. Alaska routes intoxicating hemp products, including delta-10 THC, through AMCO-licensed marijuana retailers under 3 AAC 306 amendments effective November 3, 2023. Vape shops and unlicensed retailers may not sell delta-10 products for human consumption.
Alaska voters legalized adult-use cannabis in November 2014 through Ballot Measure 2. The Alcohol and Marijuana Control Office (AMCO) staffs the Marijuana Control Board and administers the licensed cannabis market. AS 03.05.076 created the state Industrial Hemp Program at the Division of Agriculture and adopts the federal 0.3 percent delta-9 THC dry-weight threshold to define industrial hemp at harvest.
Delta-10 is an isomer of delta-9 THC produced almost exclusively through chemical conversion from hemp-derived CBD or delta-9. That synthetic-conversion production method is what state regulators target when they restrict synthetic cannabinoids. For comparison, see our Alaska delta-8 page.
Two authorities matter. AS 03.05.076 governs hemp cultivation. The 3 AAC 306 marijuana regulations govern retail sale of intoxicating cannabinoid products intended for human consumption.
Lt. Gov. Nancy Dahlstrom signed the 3 AAC 306 amendments on October 10, 2023 with an effective date of November 3, 2023. The amendments treat hemp-derived products that contain delta-9 THC or are otherwise intoxicating, when intended for human consumption, as marijuana products subject to AMCO licensing. Because delta-10 is an intoxicating cannabinoid produced through chemical conversion, it falls inside the restricted category for products intended for human consumption.
The practical outcome: delta-10 products marketed for vaping, smoking, or ingestion are not lawful at general retail in Alaska. They belong inside the AMCO marijuana framework. Operators should not rely on Farm Bill compliance language alone, because the federal Farm Bill itself is being narrowed by H.R. 5371 §781 effective November 12, 2026. Our state-by-state regulation roundup tracks parallel synthetic cannabinoid restrictions across the country.
News coverage of the 3 AAC 306 rulemaking made clear that the change was intended to remove intoxicating hemp products including delta-8 and other synthetic-conversion cannabinoids from vape shops and other unregulated retail after November 3, 2023. Hemp producers filed suit challenging the regulations, which extended legal uncertainty into 2024 but did not change the basic retail rule. Enforcement themes nationally focus on packaging that resembles candy or marijuana branding, sales to minors, and synthetic-conversion products lacking documentation of cannabinoid origin or testing. See the proposed THC limits and banned hemp products tracker.
If you are 21 or older, lawful delta-10 access is through AMCO-licensed marijuana retailers when stocked. Delta-10 produces effects similar to delta-9 THC, and metabolites overlap with delta-9 metabolites on most standard drug tests. Specialty panels may distinguish them, but those are uncommon. Out-of-state shipments are subject to AMCO scrutiny. The federal November 12, 2026 change in H.R. 5371 §781 will narrow the national hemp definition further regardless of state law.
The biggest near-term shift for delta-10 is federal. H.R. 5371 §781, signed November 12, 2025, explicitly excludes synthetic and chemically converted cannabinoids from the federal hemp definition. Delta-10 is produced almost exclusively through chemical conversion of hemp-derived CBD or delta-9, which places it inside the excluded category. The provision takes effect November 12, 2026, after which delta-10 products lose federal Farm Bill protection regardless of state law. For background see our 2018 Farm Bill revision explainer.
Is delta-10 THC legal in Alaska in 2026?
No at general retail. Under 3 AAC 306 amendments effective November 3, 2023, intoxicating hemp products including delta-10 must be sold through AMCO-licensed marijuana retailers.
What is delta-10 THC and how does it differ from delta-9?
Delta-10 is an isomer of delta-9 THC produced through chemical conversion from hemp-derived CBD or delta-9. It is intoxicating and pharmacologically similar to delta-9.
Does delta-10 show up on a drug test?
Delta-10 metabolites overlap with delta-9 metabolites on most standard tests and can trigger a positive. Specialty panels that distinguish them are uncommon.
Can I order delta-10 online to Alaska?
Out-of-state shipments of intoxicating hemp are subject to AMCO enforcement.
How does delta-10 compare to delta-8 in Alaska?
Both are produced through chemical conversion and both sit inside the AMCO channel after November 3, 2023. See our Alaska delta-8 page for the parallel framework.
What changes November 12, 2026?
The federal hemp redefinition excludes synthetic and chemically converted cannabinoids. Delta-10 loses federal Farm Bill protection on that date.
This page is provided for informational purposes by ComplyAssistAI LLC and is not legal advice. Hemp and cannabis law in Alaska changes frequently. For business compliance questions, consult an Alaska-licensed cannabis attorney. Find one in our Cannabis Lawyer Directory.
Illegal
AS 03.05.076 (industrial hemp registration); 3 AAC 306 (AMCO marijuana regulations, intoxicating-hemp amendments effective Nov 3, 2023); Measure 2 (2014)
Delta-10 products intended for human consumption must be sold through AMCO-licensed marijuana retailers under the 3 AAC 306 framework adopted in 2023.
Yes