
Email marketing remains one of the highest-ROI digital channels available to any business — and the cannabis industry is no exception. With paid advertising heavily restricted on platforms like Google and Meta, email gives cannabis business owners a direct, owned line of communication to their customers. No algorithm. No ad policy blocking your message. Just your brand, landing in the inbox of people who already chose to hear from you.
This guide covers the fundamentals of cannabis email marketing, the key rules to follow (and the costly mistakes to avoid), and a breakdown of the best platforms built to support cannabis brands.
Cannabis email marketing is the practice of sending targeted, permission-based emails to current and prospective customers of a cannabis business — whether that’s a dispensary, a cannabinoid brand (CBD, delta-8, THC beverages), an ancillary service, or an e-commerce cannabis retailer.
These campaigns can include product announcements, promotional offers, educational content, loyalty program updates, and re-engagement sequences. The key differentiator from general email marketing is the regulatory layer: cannabis businesses must navigate state-level age verification requirements, compliance rules around promotional language, and the cautious policies of mainstream email service providers.
Despite these hurdles, email marketing consistently delivers strong results. Industry benchmarks show cannabis email campaigns achieving open rates of 20–30% — well above the 21% cross-industry average (Mailchimp, 2025) — with conversion rates that outperform both paid social and display advertising for the sector.
Simply put: for cannabis businesses unable to freely advertise on mainstream platforms, a well-built email list is one of the most valuable marketing assets you own.
Only email people who have explicitly opted in. This is not just best practice — it is a legal requirement under CAN-SPAM (US), CASL (Canada), and GDPR (EU). Use clear sign-up forms on your website, at your point-of-sale, and at events. For dispensaries, a loyalty program enrollment is a natural opt-in touchpoint. Always collect date-of-birth or age confirmation at sign-up to satisfy age-gating requirements.
Not all subscribers are the same. A first-time buyer needs education; a loyal weekly customer wants exclusive offers and early access. Segment your list by purchase history, product category preference, geographic location, and engagement level. Segmented campaigns generate 760% more revenue than one-size-fits-all blasts (Campaign Monitor, 2024). Even three basic segments — new, active, and lapsed — will meaningfully improve your results.
Cannabis consumers increasingly want to understand what they’re consuming. Emails that explain terpene profiles, the difference between indica and sativa effects, dosing guidance for new users, or the benefits of different consumption methods build trust and authority. Pair this educational content with relevant product recommendations and you create a natural, low-pressure path to purchase.
Email content must align with the regulations of the states and markets you operate in. Many states prohibit certain promotional claims, restrict advertising to age-verified audiences, and require specific disclosures. Work with your legal team or compliance consultant to build an email template that includes required disclaimers, age-gating language, and compliant promotional wording before scaling your campaigns.
Set up automated email flows for your most impactful customer moments: a welcome series for new subscribers, a post-purchase thank-you with usage tips, a win-back campaign for customers who haven’t purchased in 60+ days, and a birthday or loyalty milestone reward. Automation ensures consistent communication without manual effort, and these flows typically generate the highest open and conversion rates in any cannabis email program.
Platforms like Mailchimp, Constant Contact, and Klaviyo have historically terminated cannabis accounts without warning, even for hemp and CBD businesses. Before investing in any platform, read its acceptable use policy carefully. Always use a cannabis-friendly ESP (see the platforms section below) or confirm in writing that your use case is permitted. Account termination can mean losing your entire list and email history.
Claiming your product “cures anxiety,” “treats chronic pain,” or “helps with insomnia” is a fast track to regulatory trouble. The FDA actively monitors cannabis and hemp marketing, and unauthorized therapeutic claims can trigger warning letters, fines, or forced product recalls. Keep language experiential rather than medical: “many customers find it relaxing” rather than “treats anxiety disorders.”
Cannabis-related keywords can trigger spam filters. Avoid excessive use of words like “weed,” “get high,” or “smoke” in subject lines and pre-headers. Maintain a clean list by regularly removing unengaged subscribers, validating email addresses at sign-up, and monitoring your bounce and complaint rates. Aim to keep spam complaints below 0.1% to protect your sender reputation.
This is both a legal requirement (CAN-SPAM mandates a visible, functional unsubscribe link) and good practice. A subscriber who can’t easily opt out will mark your email as spam, which is far more damaging to your sender reputation than a clean unsubscribe. Process opt-out requests within 10 business days and never re-add removed contacts to your active list.
Because most mainstream platforms restrict or prohibit cannabis content, the following providers have built policies and features specifically for the industry:
Email marketing is one of the few growth channels cannabis businesses can fully own and control. In an industry where ad accounts get suspended and social reach is throttled, a well-maintained email list is a durable, high-value asset.
The businesses that win with cannabis email marketing do so by treating their subscribers with respect: building lists with explicit consent, delivering genuinely useful content, staying rigorously compliant, and using platforms designed for the industry. Follow the dos, avoid the don’ts, and choose the right technology partner — and email will consistently be one of your highest-performing marketing investments.