Securing the right location for a cannabis or hemp business requires navigating a complex patchwork of state law, local zoning requirements, setback rules, and conditional use permit (CUP) processes that vary county by county and city by city across California. The Law Office of Shay Aaron Gilmore guides cultivators, distributors, manufacturers, testing labs, retailers, investors, landowners, and management companies through every stage of the cannabis land use approval process — from initial site selection through CUP hearings, appeals, and final entitlement.
Named as one of the Top 20 Cannabis Lawyers in California by the Los Angeles/San Francisco Daily Journal, recognized among the Top 200 Global Cannabis Lawyers by Cannabis Law Journal, and listed among the Top 100 Lawyers in Northern California by Super Lawyers® Magazine, Shay Aaron Gilmore serves as a Board Member of the International Cannabis Bar Association (INCBA), Founder of the Cannabis Practitioners Group of the California Lawyers Association, and Co-Founder of the Cannabis Law Section of the Bar Association of San Francisco.

Top 20 California Cannabis Lawyers
The Daily Journal

Global Top 200 Cannabis Lawyer
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California’s licensed cannabis supply chain is not a commercial free-for-all — it is a regulated sequence of custody transfers that the DCC monitors through Metrc, and every commercial agreement in the chain must align with the agency’s chain-of-custody requirements. Under 4 CCR §15000 et seq., a licensed distributor who receives a batch of cannabis goods for distribution must: (1) verify Metrc transfer records, (2) arrange third-party testing through a licensed laboratory before any retail transfer, (3) receive the Certificate of Analysis (COA) under 4 CCR §15726 and upload it to Metrc within one business day of issuance, and (4) verify that the product’s packaging and labeling comply with DCC requirements before releasing the batch for sale.
A supply or distribution agreement that ignores these obligations — or that attempts to transfer testing responsibility, labeling review, or Metrc compliance to the cultivator or manufacturer — creates ambiguity that collapses the moment a batch fails. When a batch fails, someone must pay for retesting, hold the product, destroy it if it cannot be remediated, and report the destruction to Metrc. A well-drafted distribution agreement allocates each of these consequences clearly: which party bears retesting costs, how long the distributor may hold a failed batch, what notice is required, and whether repeated batch failures constitute a grounds for contract termination.
The DCC’s disciplinary framework adds a compliance overlay that pure commercial contract law does not contemplate. Under B&P §26012 and DCC regulations, licensed operators who transfer cannabis goods without using a licensed distributor, fail to maintain Metrc compliance, or release a batch for retail sale without a passing COA face fines of $100 to $5,000 per violation. A supply agreement that requires a cultivator to ship directly to a retailer — bypassing distribution — not only fails as a commercial matter but creates disciplinary liability for both parties. Every cannabis supply contract should be reviewed against the DCC licensing structure before execution.
Before any application is filed, the site must be evaluated for zoning designation consistency with the proposed cannabis use, setback compliance (see below), General Plan consistency, and whether the local jurisdiction has enacted a cannabis ordinance at all. Approximately one-third of California jurisdictions continue to prohibit commercial cannabis entirely under their authority under MAUCRSA and Proposition 64. Site selection without this research can result in a CUP application filed in a jurisdiction where approval is legally impossible.
California state law establishes a minimum setback of 600 feet between a cannabis business and a school, as measured from property line to property line. This is a floor, not a ceiling. Local governments may — and routinely do — impose more stringent requirements:
| Sensitive Use Type | State Minimum | Common Local Range |
|---|---|---|
| K-12 schools | 600 ft. (Bus. & Prof. Code §26054(b)) | 600–1,500 ft. |
| Daycare centers | Varies by jurisdiction | 600–1,000 ft. |
| Parks and playgrounds | No state minimum | 200–1,000 ft. |
| Libraries | No state minimum | 200–600 ft. |
| Youth centers | No state minimum | 600–1,000 ft. |
| Other cannabis businesses | No state minimum | 500–1,000 ft. (many jurisdictions) |
| Churches and religious institutions | No state minimum | 0–600 ft. (varies widely) |
Local setback requirements must be verified against the specific ordinance in effect in the relevant jurisdiction at the time of application — ordinances are amended regularly, and many jurisdictions have different setback rules for different license types (retail vs. cultivation vs. manufacturing). A professional surveyor’s measurement is standard practice before executing any lease or purchase agreement on a proposed cannabis site.
For cannabis real estate transactions where setback compliance is a material issue, see Cannabis Real Estate Due Diligence. For DCC regulatory compliance connected to the licensed premises, see Regulatory Compliance. For DCC license defense arising from premises-related enforcement actions, see Administrative Law.
| Factor | Cannabis (DCC) | Industrial Hemp (CDFA) |
|---|---|---|
| Local permitting required | Yes — CUP, cannabis operator permit, or equivalent required in most jurisdictions | No local cannabis permit required; county agricultural commissioner registration and CDFA registration required |
| Sensitive use setbacks | Yes — state minimum 600 ft. from schools; local ordinances often higher | Not applicable — hemp is an agricultural crop |
| Zoning designation | Industrial, commercial, or mixed-use in most jurisdictions; retail in commercial zones | Agricultural, rural residential, or compatible ag zones in most jurisdictions |
| CEQA review | Required for all new CUP applications | May apply to large-scale operations; categorical exemptions available for smaller cultivation |
| Local ban authority | Yes — jurisdictions may ban commercial cannabis entirely | Limited — municipalities generally cannot ban agricultural cultivation under California's right-to-farm framework |
| DCC premises inspection | Yes — DCC may inspect licensed premises at any time | No DCC premises jurisdiction; CDFA and county ag commissioner conduct inspections |
| Ordinance patchwork | Extensive — over 100 distinct local cannabis ordinances statewide | Simpler — governed primarily by state CDFA program and county ag commissioner requirements |
Dual operators — businesses holding both DCC cannabis licenses and CDFA hemp registrations — must ensure their premises comply with both frameworks. The same-premises prohibition under Food and Agricultural Code §81006 restricts co-location of hemp cultivation and cannabis cultivation on a licensed cannabis premises without prior DCC approval. For more on hemp land use and CDFA registration, see Hemp Cultivation & Land Use.
For recent developments in California cannabis zoning, see:
A conditional use permit (CUP) is a discretionary land use entitlement issued by a local planning commission or board of supervisors that authorizes cannabis activity at a specific location, subject to conditions including operating hours, security requirements, and odor control. Most California jurisdictions require a CUP or equivalent for commercial cannabis. The DCC requires proof of local authorization before issuing a state cannabis license, making the CUP a prerequisite to state licensure.
Yes. Under MAUCRSA and Proposition 64, California cities and counties retain authority to prohibit commercial cannabis activities within their jurisdictions. Approximately one-third of California jurisdictions continue to ban commercial cannabis at the local level. If a jurisdiction has enacted a prohibition, no state DCC cannabis license may be issued for a site in that jurisdiction, regardless of zoning.
California state law establishes a minimum 600-foot setback from K-12 schools for most cannabis licenses under Business and Professions Code §26054(b). Many local governments impose larger setbacks — 1,000 feet is common — and apply setbacks to a broader range of sensitive uses including daycare centers, parks, libraries, and youth centers. Setback compliance must be verified by measurement before executing any lease or purchase agreement.
Timelines range from 60–90 days in streamlined jurisdictions to 12–18 months or longer in jurisdictions with competitive application windows, CEQA requirements, or significant community opposition. Most jurisdictions require a formal application, public notice and comment, and a planning commission hearing. Engaging experienced land use counsel from site selection onward identifies obstacles before they cause costly delays
A CUP is a land use entitlement — it authorizes the use of a specific parcel for cannabis activity under zoning law. A cannabis operator permit is a business regulatory approval issued by the local cannabis regulatory authority (such as an Office of Cannabis) that authorizes business operations. Many California jurisdictions require both. The CUP establishes the land use framework; the operator permit governs operations. Both must be in place before the DCC issues a state cannabis license.