United States state capitol building

Is it legal in my state?

Comprehensive, statute-verified legality guides for products and activities across all 50 US states. Updated for 2026.

Cannabis & Substances

Recreational Marijuana

Recreational marijuana refers to the legal use of cannabis for personal enjoyment rather than medical purposes. As of 2026, 25 states have legalized recreational marijuana, while others maintain various levels of prohibition or decriminalization.

Delta-8 THC

Delta-8 THC is a cannabinoid derived from hemp that produces mild psychoactive effects. Following the 2018 Farm Bill, many states have moved to explicitly ban or regulate it.

Delta-9 THC Edibles

Delta-9 THC edibles derived from hemp (containing less than 0.3% THC by dry weight) exist in a legal gray area created by the 2018 Farm Bill. Many states have moved to regulate or ban these products separately from marijuana.

CBD Products

CBD products derived from hemp were federally legalized by the 2018 Farm Bill with less than 0.3% Delta-9 THC. States maintain their own additional regulations.

Kratom

Kratom (Mitragyna speciosa) is a tropical tree whose leaves contain compounds with psychotropic effects. Not federally controlled, but several states have banned or regulated it.

Psilocybin / Magic Mushrooms

Psilocybin mushrooms contain the psychoactive compound psilocybin, a Schedule I substance federally. Some jurisdictions have decriminalized or legalized therapeutic use.

Salvia

Salvia divinorum is not federally scheduled in the United States, but its legal status varies significantly by state. As of 2026, 29 states have banned it, while it remains legal or restricted by age in others.

Vaping & E-Cigarettes

Vaping devices heat liquid containing nicotine to produce aerosol. Legal for adults in all states but regulations vary on flavors, taxes, and indoor use.

Raw Milk Sales

Raw milk has not been pasteurized. FDA bans interstate sale, but states set their own intrastate rules.

Weapons & Self-Defense

Body Armor

Body armor and bulletproof vests are legal for most civilians to purchase and wear in the United States. Federal law prohibits purchase by convicted felons. Some states have additional restrictions on where body armor can be worn.

Open Carry

Open carry refers to the practice of visibly carrying a firearm in public. Laws vary widely: some states allow open carry without any permit, others require a permit, and a few prohibit it entirely. Open carry of long guns (rifles/shotguns) is often treated differently than handguns.

Constitutional Carry (Permitless Concealed Carry)

Constitutional carry allows carrying a concealed handgun without a permit. As of 2026, 32 states have adopted constitutional carry laws, with 5 additional states allowing it with some restrictions.

Suppressors / Silencers

Firearm suppressors reduce the sound of a gunshot. Legal under federal law with NFA registration and $200 tax stamp, but some states ban them entirely.

Tasers & Stun Guns

Tasers and stun guns are electroshock self-defense devices. Most states allow civilian ownership, but some require permits or ban them entirely. Regulations often differ between conducted energy devices (Tasers) and contact stun guns.

Pepper Spray Restrictions

Pepper spray (OC spray) is legal for self-defense in all 50 states, but restrictions vary on concentration, container size, age requirements, and where it can be carried.

Switchblades / Automatic Knives

Switchblades open automatically by pressing a button. Federal law restricts interstate commerce but not possession. State laws vary widely.

Brass Knuckles

Brass knuckles are metal devices worn over the knuckles as weapons. Many states classify them as prohibited weapons.

Butterfly Knives

Butterfly knives (balisongs) are folding knives with two handles that counter-rotate around the blade. Legality varies significantly by state, with some banning possession entirely and others allowing open or concealed carry.

Nunchucks

Nunchucks (nunchaku) are traditional martial arts weapons consisting of two sticks connected by a chain or rope. Several states have historically banned them, though recent court decisions have overturned some bans.

Flamethrowers

Flamethrowers are not federally regulated in the United States and are not classified as firearms by the ATF. Most states allow civilian ownership, though a few states restrict or ban them.

Gambling & Gaming

Sports Betting

Sports betting became eligible for state legalization after the Supreme Court struck down PASPA in 2018. As of 2026, 35 states have fully legalized sports betting, with 3 additional states allowing it in restricted forms and many offering online/mobile wagering.

Online Gambling / Sports Betting

Online gambling and sports betting legality varies dramatically. Following the 2018 Murphy v. NCAA decision, states are free to legalize sports betting.

Online Casinos & Poker

Online casino gambling and poker involve wagering real money through internet platforms. Only a handful of states have legalized and regulated online casino gambling.

Daily Fantasy Sports

Daily Fantasy Sports (DFS) platforms like DraftKings and FanDuel allow users to compete for cash prizes based on real athlete performance. Most states consider DFS a game of skill rather than gambling, but some states have banned or restricted it.

Poker Home Games

Home poker games occupy a legal gray area in many states. While social gambling among friends is tolerated in most jurisdictions, some states technically prohibit all forms of gambling outside licensed establishments. The key factors are usually whether a house rake is taken and whether the game is open to the public.

Gambling Age

The legal gambling age in the United States varies by state and by type of gambling. Most states set the minimum age at 21 for casinos and sports betting, while lottery and bingo may be available at 18. Some states have no casinos at all.

Driving & Vehicles

Window Tinting

Window tinting laws regulate VLT percentage allowed on vehicle windows. Every state has specific regulations.

Radar Detectors

Radar detectors are electronic devices to detect speed monitoring equipment. Legal in most states for private vehicles, banned in Virginia and DC.

Radar Jammers

Radar jammers actively interfere with police radar signals and are illegal under federal law (FCC regulations). Laser jammers (lidar jammers) are a separate category and are regulated at the state level, with some states banning them and others allowing them.

License Plate Covers

License plate covers and frames that obscure, alter, or make license plates unreadable are illegal in most states. Clear covers may be legal in some states but illegal in others. Laws have tightened as automated toll collection and traffic cameras have expanded.

Lane Splitting (Motorcycles)

Lane splitting is riding a motorcycle between lanes of traffic. California explicitly legalized it; most other states prohibit it or have no specific laws.

Right Turn on Red

Right turn on red (RTOR) is permitted in all 50 states after a complete stop, unless a sign prohibits it. However, New York City and some other municipalities ban RTOR at most intersections. Some states have additional restrictions.

Driving Barefoot

No state explicitly prohibits driving barefoot, despite widespread belief. Some states have advisory recommendations.

Studded Snow Tires

Studded snow tires use metal studs for traction on ice but can damage road surfaces. Most states allow them seasonally, some ban them entirely, and a few have no restrictions.

Lifestyle & Property

Airbnb & Short-Term Rentals

Short-term rental regulations vary dramatically across the United States. While no state outright bans Airbnb, many cities and counties have enacted strict regulations including registration requirements, occupancy limits, and zoning restrictions.

Off-Grid Living

Off-grid living involves being self-sufficient without reliance on public utilities. While no state bans off-grid living outright, many have building codes, zoning laws, and utility connection requirements that make it difficult. Some states are more permissive than others.

Collecting Rainwater

Rainwater collection involves capturing and storing rainwater. Legal in most states, but some Western states with prior appropriation water rights have restrictions.

Composting Toilets

Composting toilets are waterless waste management systems popular in off-grid homes and tiny houses. Legality depends on state plumbing codes and health department regulations. Some states explicitly permit them while others require a conventional toilet as the primary fixture.

Backyard Chickens

Keeping backyard chickens is regulated primarily at the city and county level rather than by state law. Most states do not prohibit backyard chickens, but local ordinances often limit flock size, ban roosters, and require coop setbacks from property lines.

Dumpster Diving

The Supreme Court ruled in California v. Greenwood (1988) there is no privacy expectation for discarded materials. Local trespassing laws may apply.

Sleeping in Your Car

Sleeping in your car is not explicitly illegal under most state laws, but many cities and counties have ordinances against it. Rest areas, Walmart parking lots, and designated overnight parking areas are common legal options. Laws vary significantly by locality.

Recording Conversations

Laws fall into one-party consent and two-party/all-party consent categories. Federal law requires one-party consent.

Hidden Cameras & Surveillance Devices

Hidden cameras and surveillance devices are used for security and monitoring. Laws vary on recording in private spaces, audio recording, and notification requirements.

Exotic Pet Ownership

Exotic pet ownership covers non-traditional animals like ferrets, hedgehogs, sugar gliders, monkeys, and large reptiles. Laws vary enormously by state.