Hear from Our Customers
You’re not looking for a lecture about cannabis. You want to know if the product is clean, if it’ll show up on time, and if you’re dealing with an actual licensed operation or just another storefront hoping you don’t ask questions.
Here’s what changes when you order through a verified delivery service. You’re pulling from real dispensaries with OCM licenses—places like Dazed on Union Square West, Housing Works on Broadway, or Green Genius on 3rd Avenue. Every product has a QR code that links to its Certificate of Analysis. You can check potency, cannabinoid profile, and whether it passed contamination testing before it ever reaches your door.
Same-day delivery means you place an order during retail hours and it arrives that day. Not next week. Not when someone feels like it. Delivery teams verify your ID on arrival because that’s the law, and they’re trained on compliance protocols that licensed operations actually follow. You’re not hoping the product is safe—you’re seeing documentation that proves it.
We operate as a delivery connection to licensed dispensaries across Manhattan—from zip code 10001 through 10032. That’s over 30 verified locations including neighborhoods around Gramercy Park, Union Square, East Village, Chelsea, Hell’s Kitchen, and the Upper West Side.
We’re not running product out of a basement or dodging regulations. Every delivery pulls from dispensaries that post the OCM verification tool at their entrance and maintain the required delivery logs for five years. When New York’s legal market grew from 50 licensed shops to over 525 in two years, the demand for compliant delivery grew with it.
We’re here because you shouldn’t have to guess whether you’re buying tested cannabis or taking a chance on unregulated product. We understand the difference between licensed operations and the illicit storefronts that still outnumber legal ones in this city.
You browse available products from licensed dispensaries in your delivery zone. Flower makes up about a third of what people buy, concentrates another 38%, with edibles and vapes filling out the rest. Each product listing shows THC/CBD content, strain type, and brand.
When you place an order, you confirm you’re 21 or older. That’s the first check. Payment happens through debit card or ACH—New York requires delivery services to accept these methods, so you’re not dealing with cash-only situations that feel like you’re doing something you shouldn’t be.
Delivery happens during the dispensary’s retail hours. That’s a state regulation, not our choice. Your delivery person arrives with your order in a secure transport vehicle, checks your ID again at the door, and hands over products that include the required universal cannabis symbol and QR code linking to lab results. The whole process is logged and available to the Office of Cannabis Management if they audit the dispensary. You get a text when the driver is close, and the whole thing typically wraps up within a few hours of ordering.
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Every product that arrives has been tested before it hit the shelf. New York requires lab testing for potency, pesticides, heavy metals, and microbial contamination. If it didn’t pass, it doesn’t get sold. The universal cannabis symbol on the package isn’t decorative—it’s confirmation that what you’re holding went through the state’s regulatory process.
You’re ordering from dispensaries spread across Manhattan. In the 10003 zip around Gramercy Park and Union Square, you’ve got options like Dazed, Gotham, Housing Works, and The Flowery. Head toward Chelsea in 10011 and you’re pulling from Chelsea Cannabis, Gotham, or FlynnStoned. Each location maintains its own inventory, so product availability shifts based on where your delivery is coming from.
Delivery fees exist because this is a regulated service with insurance requirements, vehicle security protocols, and trained staff. You’re not paying extra for fun—you’re covering the cost of a legal operation that won’t disappear when enforcement shows up. Monthly sales in New York hit $214 million in August 2025, up 106% from the year before, because people are willing to pay a bit more for products they can actually trust. You’re getting access to that same verified supply chain without leaving your apartment.
Check for OCM licensing. Every legal dispensary in New York must display the Office of Cannabis Management verification tool near their main entrance, and that same verification applies to their delivery operations. When you order through us, you’re connected to dispensaries that hold active licenses and follow state regulations for delivery.
Look for the universal cannabis symbol on every product. It’s required by law and tells you the item has been tested and approved for sale. If a service can’t show you which licensed dispensary your order is coming from, or if products arrive without lab testing QR codes, you’re likely dealing with an unlicensed operation.
New York’s legal market is still competing with illicit shops that outnumber licensed ones, so it’s fair to be skeptical. Licensed delivery services maintain logs of every delivery for five years, and those records are available to OCM during audits. You can also verify a dispensary’s license status directly through the state’s website if you want to confirm before ordering.
Delivery can only happen during a dispensary’s retail operating hours. That’s a state regulation, not a company policy. Most licensed dispensaries in Manhattan operate between 10 a.m. and 10 p.m., though some locations have slightly different schedules.
Same-day delivery means your order arrives the same day you place it, as long as you order during operational hours and you’re within the delivery zone. If you order late in the evening, it might not arrive until the next day depending on the dispensary’s closing time and delivery volume.
This isn’t like food delivery that runs 24/7. New York built delivery restrictions into the licensing rules to maintain oversight of the supply chain. Some services advertise 24-hour delivery, but if they’re operating outside retail hours, they’re not following OCM regulations. You’re better off ordering from a compliant service during normal hours than risking an unlicensed delivery that could show up with untested product.
Delivery fees typically range from $5 to $20 depending on distance and order size, though some dispensaries waive the fee for orders over a certain amount. You’re paying for the convenience of not traveling, plus the cost of maintaining a legal delivery operation with trained staff, secure vehicles, and insurance coverage.
Product prices are generally the same whether you buy in-store or via delivery. A gram of flower that costs $15 at the dispensary will cost $15 for delivery, plus whatever delivery fee applies. Some customers worry that delivery is significantly more expensive, but the markup is in the service fee, not the product itself.
Cost is a real concern, especially when you add delivery fees to an already-regulated market that’s competing with cheaper illicit options. But untested cannabis from an unlicensed source might be cheaper upfront and more expensive later if you end up with contaminated product or inconsistent potency. You’re paying for verified quality and legal protection, which matters more than saving a few dollars on something you’re putting in your body.
They’re required to check it. New York law mandates that delivery employees verify the recipient’s age and identity before handing over any cannabis product. You already confirmed you’re 21+ when you placed the order online, but the ID check at delivery is a second verification that’s part of the compliance process.
If you don’t have a valid government-issued ID showing you’re at least 21 years old, the driver cannot complete the delivery. They’ll leave with the product, and you won’t get a refund for refusing to show ID. This isn’t the driver being difficult—it’s them following the law so the dispensary doesn’t lose its license.
Some people get nervous about showing ID for a cannabis delivery, but this is a legal transaction in a regulated market. The driver isn’t reporting your information anywhere beyond confirming you meet the age requirement. Every delivery is logged, but those logs are for OCM audits, not law enforcement databases. If a service tells you ID isn’t necessary, that’s a red flag that you’re not dealing with a licensed operation.
Yes. Every regulated cannabis product sold in New York includes a QR code that links to its Certificate of Analysis. You can scan that code before you even place an order if the dispensary lists products online with photos, or you can check it when the product arrives.
The CoA shows cannabinoid content (THC, CBD, and other compounds), terpene profile, and results from contamination testing including pesticides, heavy metals, and microbial screening. If a product failed any part of the testing process, it doesn’t make it to the dispensary shelf or into a delivery order.
This level of transparency is one of the main reasons to use a licensed delivery service instead of buying from an illicit source. You’re not guessing about potency or hoping the product is clean—you’re looking at lab data from a state-approved testing facility. If a delivery service can’t provide access to CoAs, or if products show up without the required QR codes and universal symbol, you’re not getting regulated cannabis no matter what they tell you.
We connect you to licensed dispensaries across Manhattan, with several locations near Gramercy Park and surrounding neighborhoods. In the 10003 zip code covering Gramercy Park, Union Square, and East Village, you can order from Dazed on Union Square West, Gotham on East 3rd, Green Genius on 3rd Avenue, Housing Works on Broadway, The Flowery on East 10th, and Travel Agency on Broadway.
If you’re closer to the Flatiron or Kips Bay areas, zip code 10010 includes Blue Forest on East 25th and Stoops on 5th Avenue. Head toward Murray Hill in 10016 and you’ve got access to Bud & Honey on 5th, Just A Little Higher on 2nd Avenue, NY Cannabis on 5th, and Smiley Exotics on East 30th.
Each dispensary maintains its own inventory, so product selection varies by location. Some focus heavily on flower, others carry extensive concentrate and edible options. When you place an order, you’re seeing what’s available from the dispensary assigned to your delivery zone. All of these locations are OCM-licensed and follow the same testing and compliance standards, so you’re getting verified product regardless of which specific shop fulfills your delivery.
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