Labeling and warnings
Regulated states commonly require product labels to identify ingredients, serving information, safety warnings, or alkaloid details in a clear way.
Statewide legal summaries
Kratom laws vary by state, county, city, and product type. These statewide summaries are a starting point only and should be checked against official sources before buying, selling, or shipping kratom.
Consumer protection laws
The Kratom Consumer Protection Act, often shortened to KCPA, is a model for state-level kratom regulation. Some states use that name directly, while others pass similar laws with their own wording and enforcement rules.
Regulated states commonly require product labels to identify ingredients, serving information, safety warnings, or alkaloid details in a clear way.
Many laws restrict adulterated products, synthetic alkaloids, contaminants, or formulas that do not meet state quality requirements.
States that regulate kratom often set an 18+ or 21+ minimum age and may require retailers to follow specific display, registration, or testing rules.
Legal status overview
Kratom is not handled the same way in every layer of U.S. law. Federal agencies, state legislatures, city governments, and product regulators can all affect whether a product may be sold, shipped, labeled, or possessed in a specific place.
Kratom is not currently listed as a federally controlled substance, but federal status does not override state or local restrictions.
The FDA has not approved kratom for medical use and has raised concerns around safety, contamination, and disease-treatment claims.
The DEA has monitored kratom and previously considered stricter scheduling, but kratom remains unscheduled under the federal Controlled Substances Act.
Why laws differ
Kratom policy is uneven because lawmakers and regulators weigh product access, safety concerns, quality controls, and public-health claims differently. One state may ban kratom outright, another may regulate it through labeling and testing rules, and a city or county may add local restrictions on top of statewide law.
Agencies often focus on mitragynine, 7-hydroxymitragynine, product potency, and contamination risk.
Products marketed as treatments can trigger stricter scrutiny because kratom is not FDA-approved for medical use.
Some cities and counties maintain separate bans or retail limits even when statewide law allows kratom.
U.S. state lookup
Use the lookup below as a quick directory reference. State summaries may not capture every city, county, product-format, or shipping restriction, so confirm details with official sources before making a buying or selling decision.