CANNABIS PURCHASE, ACQUISITION & FINANCING AGREEMENTS
Acquiring a licensed cannabis business in California is not a standard M&A transaction — it is a regulated process in which the DCC must approve the change in ownership before the buyer can operate the license, and in which a mis-structured purchase agreement can result in denial of the ownership change application, forfeiture of the purchase price, or disciplinary action against both the buyer and the seller. Under DCC regulations (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 4, §15023) and B&P §§26012–26057, partial and complete ownership changes require DCC involvement before the new owner may operate, and the owner-definition threshold under §15003 is an aggregate ownership interest of 20% or more. The Law Office of Shay Aaron Gilmore drafts, reviews, and negotiates cannabis purchase agreements, asset and equity acquisition documents, secured financing arrangements, and unwind agreements, with provisions designed to align closing mechanics with DCC ownership change approval timelines and regulatory conditions.
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Structuring the Cannabis Business Acquisition — DCC Approval as a Condition Precedent
The most fundamental difference between a cannabis business acquisition and a standard commercial acquisition is that the deal cannot close — legally or operationally — until the DCC has approved the ownership change. Under DCC regulations (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 4, §15023) and B&P §§26012–26057, a buyer who takes operational control of a licensed cannabis business as a new owner before the DCC has approved the ownership change — in a complete-transfer transaction — is operating without a valid license and may face disciplinary action. In a partial ownership change where at least one original owner remains, the business may continue operating during the DCC’s review period under the existing license. Any purchase agreement that sets a closing date without making DCC approval a condition precedent creates a structural defect that can leave the buyer operating without authority and the seller liable for enabling an unlicensed operation.
A DCC-compliant cannabis acquisition structure must: (1) make DCC ownership change approval an express condition precedent to closing; (2) provide a realistic outside date for DCC approval — currently 60 to 120+ days for complete-ownership-transfer transactions requiring a new license application, with partial ownership changes reviewed on a standard timeline following the 14-day notification, and longer for transactions involving background check delays, complex ownership structures, or social equity applicant transfers; (3) address what happens to operations, revenues, and ongoing expenses during the DCC review period; (4) specify what constitutes DCC approval sufficient to close (a full license transfer, a temporary approval, or a conditional approval); and (5) provide a termination right and deposit return mechanism if DCC approval is denied.
Management agreements are frequently used during the DCC review period to allow the buyer to participate in operations while the ownership change application is pending. These interim arrangements must be structured carefully to avoid creating an undisclosed ownership interest — the management fee must not constitute a revenue share that triggers DCC owner disclosure, and the manager’s operational authority must remain advisory until DCC approval is obtained. The Law Office of Shay Aaron Gilmore has experience structuring the full documentation package for cannabis acquisitions: purchase agreement, interim management agreement, DCC ownership change application support, and closing documents.
Secured Financing, Lien Structures, and Cannabis Collateral
Financing a cannabis business acquisition presents a unique collateral problem: the primary assets of a licensed cannabis operation — the DCC license itself, the cannabis inventory, and the equipment used to process and store cannabis goods — each raise distinct issues under California’s secured transactions law and DCC regulations.
The DCC license is not freely transferable and cannot be pledged as collateral in the conventional sense — a security interest in the license cannot be perfected under UCC Article 9 because the license cannot be transferred to a secured party without DCC approval. What a lender can do is take a security interest in the licensee entity’s membership interests or shares, pair it with a pledge agreement that restricts the pledgor’s ability to transfer the interests without the lender’s consent, and structure a default remedy that triggers a DCC ownership change application to the lender-approved buyer. This structure requires careful coordination between the loan documents and the DCC ownership change process.
Cannabis inventory creates an inventory financing challenge because it is both the primary operating asset and a regulated substance that can only be held by a DCC licensee. A lender whose security interest attaches to cannabis inventory cannot take possession of the collateral upon default — it is not a licensed cannabis distributor and cannot legally hold cannabis goods. Cannabis inventory financing should include a DCC-compliant disposition plan for default scenarios: a pre-negotiated sale to a licensed buyer, an assignment to a DCC-licensed receiver, or an accelerated wind-down and destruction protocol. The 280E tax overlay adds another dimension for adult-use cannabis operators: interest payments on cannabis business loans are not fully deductible for federal tax purposes, and the cost of debt financing is higher on an after-tax basis than for non-cannabis businesses. Note: As of April 22, 2026, state-licensed medical cannabis has been rescheduled to Schedule III under federal law, and 280E no longer applies to medicinal operations. Operators holding combined adult-use and medicinal licenses should model 280E exposure on a segregated-activity basis with their tax advisor.
Equipment financing is more straightforward but still requires attention to the fact that cannabis-specific equipment — extraction systems, cultivation lighting arrays, climate control systems — may not have a liquid secondary market outside the cannabis industry, affecting both lender collateral value and borrower negotiating leverage.
Cannabis vs. Hemp — Purchase & Financing Agreement Differences
| Issue | Cannabis Purchase & Financing | Hemp Purchase & Financing |
|---|---|---|
| Regulatory approval required | Complete transfers: new license application required; DCC approval required before new owners may operate (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 4, §15023). Partial transfers (at least one original owner remains): 14-day post-closing notification required; operations may continue during review. Timeline for complete transfers: 60–120+ days | No state approval required for hemp business acquisitions; standard commercial closing timeline |
| License as collateral | Cannot be conventionally pledged; security interest in licensee entity equity is the practical alternative | No licensing constraint; hemp business assets freely pledgeable as collateral |
| Inventory financing | DCC-licensed party must hold cannabis inventory at all times; lender cannot take possession upon default | Hemp inventory freely pledgeable; standard UCC Article 9 security interest; lender can take possession |
| 280E tax impact on financing | Adult-use: interest expense not fully deductible under §280E; increases effective cost of debt. Medicinal (as of April 22, 2026): §280E no longer applies; standard deductibility restored. Combined-license operators must segregate activities. | No 280E application to hemp businesses; standard deductibility of business interest |
| Contract enforceability | State courts only; federal illegality defense applies; lender must use California state forum | State and federal courts; federal diversity jurisdiction; AAA/JAMS arbitration fully enforceable |
| Background check for buyer | DCC background check required for all new owners as part of ownership change application | No state background check for hemp business buyers |
Representative Matters
- Drafted and negotiated purchase agreements and ancillary documents in multiple acquisitions of licensed manufacturing and distribution companies across California, including transactions complicated by broker-structured deals that conflicted with DCC ownership transfer requirements.
- Advised a Sacramento Valley investor group on the secured financing structure for a cannabis cultivation operation acquisition, including the security interest in the licensee entity’s membership interests, the DCC-compliant disposition plan for default scenarios, and the 280E tax implications for debt service.
- Led the unwind of an investment in a licensed cannabis manufacturer after repeated criminal incidents at the licensed premises, negotiating the unwind agreement to protect investor capital while preserving the licensee’s ability to remain operational and DCC-compliant during the exit.
- Reviewed and restructured a cannabis equipment financing agreement for a cannabis manufacturer to address the absence of a DCC-compliant collateral disposition plan and add a lender cooperation covenant for DCC investigations affecting the licensed operation.
Frequently Asked Questions
It depends on the transaction structure. In a complete ownership transfer (all owners transferring), the new owners may not operate the license until the DCC approves a new license application — so DCC approval must be a condition precedent to closing (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 4, §15023). In a partial ownership change (at least one original owner remains), the business may continue operating under the existing license during the DCC’s review, and the notification to the DCC is due within 14 days of the ownership change. Every cannabis acquisition agreement should specify which scenario applies and include an appropriate condition precedent, outside date, and termination mechanism accordingly.
For complete-ownership-transfer transactions requiring a new license application, cannabis purchase agreements should use an outside date of at least 120–180 days, with extension rights tied to DCC processing status, rather than a fixed calendar date. For partial ownership changes, the outside date is less critical because operations continue during review, but the agreement should include a 14-day DCC notification deadline.
Section 280E of the Internal Revenue Code prohibits businesses trafficking in Schedule I or II controlled substances from deducting ordinary business expenses, including interest expense, for federal tax purposes. As of April 22, 2026, state-licensed medical cannabis has been rescheduled to Schedule III under federal law, and 280E no longer applies to medicinal operations. Adult-use/recreational cannabis remains on Schedule I, and 280E continues to apply in full to those operations. For operators holding both adult-use and medicinal licenses, the 280E impact must be modeled on a segregated-activity basis. Buyers and lenders structuring cannabis acquisition financing should model the after-tax cost of debt with current 280E status and Schedule III transition planning in mind.

