Federal Cannabis Rescheduling: What the Move to Schedule III Means for Operators Right Now
The federal government has taken its most significant step in cannabis policy in over 50 years. Here's what actually happened, what the industry is saying, and what it means for your business — with eyes wide open on what's still uncertain.
What happened
On December 18, 2025, President Trump signed an executive order directing Attorney General Pam Bondi to expedite the reclassification of cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act. The move builds on a years-long policy review that began under the Biden administration — including a 2023 HHS recommendation, a May 2024 DEA proposed rule, and nearly 43,000 public comments — all of which stalled before a final rule was ever issued.
Then, in April 2026, the Department of Justice and DEA went further: they issued an immediate order placing FDA-approved cannabis products and state-licensed medical cannabis products into Schedule III now, while initiating an expedited administrative hearing process beginning June 29, 2026 to evaluate broader cannabis rescheduling.
The executive order itself does not move cannabis to Schedule III. It instructs DOJ and DEA to complete the rulemaking. Cannabis officially remains Schedule I until a final rule is issued and takes effect.
Initial industry reactions
Reaction from the cannabis industry has ranged from cautious optimism to outright celebration — with some skepticism from policy analysts who have watched similar moments stall before.
Rescheduling unlocks the removal of 280E, fundamentally reshaping cash flows, balance sheets, and valuation frameworks. With normalized tax treatment, the industry can finally operate like a real consumer or healthcare category.
— Karan Wadhera, Casa Verde Capital co-founderThis is not about legalization — it's about legitimacy. Removing 280E allows compliant, state-licensed operators to reinvest in growth, innovation and workforce development across the nearly half-million Americans employed in this industry.
— Michelle Rutter Friberg, National Cannabis Industry AssociationSkeptics point to a real tension: while Trump's executive order signals support for rescheduling, agencies within his own administration — including the DEA — had, as recently as late 2025, quietly rescinded Biden-era policies of non-prosecution for personal marijuana possession. Federal marijuana arrests have continued, and some analysts view the executive order as largely symbolic until a final rule takes effect.
Immediate benefits for cannabis operators
These are the impacts operators can begin planning around — with the caveat that most don't take full legal effect until a final rule is issued.
Long-term benefits for cannabis operators
What's still uncertain — and why it matters
What comes next: the rescheduling timeline
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Completed
Trump executive order signed — Dec 18, 2025Directed DOJ/DEA to expedite rescheduling to Schedule III.
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Completed
DOJ/DEA partial interim order — April 2026FDA-approved cannabis products and state-licensed medical cannabis immediately placed in Schedule III. Full rescheduling proceedings announced.
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Upcoming
Administrative hearing begins — June 29, 2026Formal hearing on broader cannabis rescheduling. Testimony, evidence, and cross-examination. This is a legal proceeding, not a policy debate.
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Pending
ALJ recommended decisionAdministrative law judge issues findings. Parties may file exceptions before the record is certified to the DEA Administrator.
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Pending
DEA Administrator final order publishedBest case: late 2026. Realistic planning baseline: 2027. Delayed scenario (court stay or appeals): 2028+.
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Pending
Final rule effective date — 280E relief beginsThe moment operators can begin deducting ordinary business expenses. 30-day minimum from publication. Subject to Congressional Review Act challenge window.
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Future
Potential litigation and court challengesLegalization opponents have vowed to sue. Court challenges could stay the effective date and delay relief further.
Do not assume 280E relief for your 2025 or 2026 tax filings until a final rule is effective. Model multiple scenarios — rescheduling effective mid-2026, 2027, and delayed past 2027. Revisit entity structure and cost allocation strategies now, before a final rule locks in your position. Work with your cannabis CPA on scenario-based tax planning.
MindfulCPAs specializes in cannabis tax strategy, 280E planning, and post-rescheduling advisory services. If you're a cannabis operator, founder, or cultivator preparing for the Schedule III transition, now is the time to model your tax position and restructure before a final rule takes effect. Reach out to start a planning conversation.

