Hear from Our Customers
You already know the public transportation situation here. No subway access. Buses that take forever. Getting to a dispensary in Manhattan or another part of the Bronx eats up your entire evening.
That’s where cannabis delivery service to home makes sense. You browse products online, place your order, pay through the platform, and wait for delivery. No travel time. No parking headaches. No standing in line at a dispensary after a long day.
The process is straightforward. You get access to flower, edibles, vapes, concentrates, and pre-rolls—all lab-tested and legal under New York state regulations. Orders placed before 11 PM get delivered the same day. You verify your ID at the door, sign for the package, and you’re done.
If you’ve been putting off trying legal cannabis because getting to a dispensary feels like a project, this is the workaround. It’s not complicated. It’s just delivery.
We operate as a licensed cannabis delivery service in Co-Op City, NY, following every state regulation that applies to legal cannabis sales. That means age verification, pre-payment requirements, proper documentation, and third-party lab testing on every product.
New York’s cannabis market has grown fast—from $34 million in monthly sales in early 2024 to over $168 million by early 2026. There are now over 580 licensed dispensaries statewide, but access still depends on where you live. Co-Op City’s location makes delivery a more practical option than retail visits for most residents.
You’re not dealing with a gray-market operation. You’re ordering from a state-licensed provider that tracks inventory, verifies age, and delivers during legal hours. The difference matters when you’re looking for consistent quality and actual accountability.
First, you browse the online menu. Products are organized by category—flower, edibles, vapes, concentrates, pre-rolls. Each listing includes strain information, THC/CBD content, and pricing. You add what you want to your cart.
Second, you check out and pay online. New York law requires pre-payment for all cannabis deliveries. No cash on delivery. You can use debit cards, CanPay, or other accepted payment methods. This step also includes age attestation—you confirm you’re 21 or older.
Third, your order gets processed and assigned to a delivery driver. You’ll receive tracking information with an estimated arrival time. Most orders placed before 11 PM arrive the same day. Delivery happens during standard dispensary operating hours.
Fourth, the driver arrives at your address. You’ll need to show a valid ID proving you’re 21 or older and sign for the package. The driver checks your ID against the name on the order, hands over your products in discreet packaging, and that’s it. The whole process from order to delivery typically takes a few hours if you order early enough in the day.
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Every product we deliver has been tested by a third-party lab. That’s not marketing language—it’s a state requirement. Labs check for potency, pesticides, heavy metals, and microbial contamination. You can ask to see test results if you want verification.
Pricing in New York runs higher than other states. The average cannabis product costs around $31.49 as of early 2026, driven by limited supply and regulatory costs. You’re paying for legal access and quality control, not just the product itself. We offer cannabis delivery deals and loyalty programs that bring the per-order cost down over time.
Product selection matters when you’re ordering for delivery. You want access to different strains, consumption methods, and potency levels. We stock a rotating inventory of flower (the most popular option, used by about 62% of consumers), edibles (around 18% of users prefer this method), and vapes (about 16% of the market). If you’re new to cannabis or trying a different product type, our customer service team can walk you through options.
Delivery windows depend on when you order. The 11 PM cutoff for same-day service is real—if you miss it, your order gets scheduled for the next day. Discreet packaging is standard. Our drivers don’t show up in branded vehicles or uniforms that announce what they’re delivering.
You need a valid government-issued ID that proves you’re 21 or older. Our driver will check the name on your ID against the name on the order—they have to match. If they don’t, the driver can’t complete the delivery.
You’ll also need to provide a signature. This isn’t optional. New York regulations require signature confirmation for every cannabis delivery. The whole verification process takes about a minute.
Make sure someone 21 or older is available at the delivery address when the driver arrives. If no one answers or the person who answers can’t provide valid ID, the driver leaves with your order and you’ll need to reschedule. That delays everything and creates unnecessary hassle.
No. New York law requires all cannabis deliveries to be pre-paid online before the driver leaves for your address. You can’t hand over cash at the door.
Accepted payment methods typically include debit cards and CanPay, a payment system designed specifically for cannabis purchases. We accept other digital payment options, but cash on delivery isn’t one of them.
This rule exists because of banking restrictions around cannabis sales and state tracking requirements. Every transaction has to be documented before delivery happens. If a service tells you they accept cash on delivery for cannabis, that’s a red flag—they’re either not following state law or they’re not actually licensed.
If you order before 11 PM, you’ll typically receive your delivery the same day, usually within a few hours. Exact timing depends on order volume, your location within Co-Op City, and the driver’s route.
We provide tracking information once your order is out for delivery. You’ll get an estimated arrival window so you’re not sitting around waiting all day. If something delays the delivery, our customer service team will contact you with an update.
Orders placed after the 11 PM cutoff get scheduled for the next available delivery window. That’s usually the following day during normal dispensary operating hours. If you need something tonight, don’t wait until 10:55 PM to place your order—give yourself buffer time in case the website is slow or you need to contact customer service.
Every legal cannabis product sold in New York must be tested by a state-approved third-party lab before it reaches consumers. This isn’t optional or up to individual businesses—it’s state law.
Labs test for THC and CBD potency so you know what you’re getting. They also screen for contaminants: pesticides, heavy metals, residual solvents, and microbial growth like mold or bacteria. Products that fail testing can’t be sold.
You can request to see lab results for any product you order. We maintain documentation for every item in our inventory. If a service can’t or won’t provide lab results when asked, that’s a problem. It likely means they’re not operating legally or their products haven’t been properly tested.
The products are the same—both delivery services and retail dispensaries source from licensed New York cultivators and manufacturers. The difference is convenience and how you access those products.
At a dispensary, you travel to the location, browse in person, talk to staff face-to-face, and leave with your purchase immediately. That works great if you live near a dispensary or enjoy the in-store experience. For Co-Op City residents, it means dealing with limited public transportation and potentially an hour or more of travel time each direction.
With cannabis delivery near you, you browse online, place your order from home, and wait for delivery. You lose the immediate gratification of walking out with your products right away, but you gain back all that travel time. You also get access to detailed product information online that you can review at your own pace instead of trying to remember everything a budtender tells you in a busy store.
New York’s legal cannabis market is still relatively new—the first dispensary opened in December 2022. Limited supply and high regulatory costs drive prices up. As of early 2026, the average cannabis product in New York costs about $31.49, which is higher than most other legal markets.
Regulatory compliance isn’t cheap. Licensed businesses pay for testing, security, inventory tracking systems, licensing fees, and staff training. Those costs get passed along to consumers. You’re also paying for legal protection—buying from a licensed source means you’re not risking legal trouble or unsafe products.
Prices should come down as more cultivators get licensed and supply increases. The market grew from $100 million in total sales in 2023 to $1.8 billion in 2025. More competition typically means better pricing. But for now, expect to pay a premium for legal, tested, reliably sourced cannabis in New York compared to what you might have paid in other states or through unlicensed sources.