Colorado: No Active Bill - Build for Next Session

Kratom remains unregulated in gas stations and vape shops across the state. No kratom legislation moved this session, but the next session starts now - with you. Use the off-session window to document retail sales, recruit medical/law enforcement allies, and build local awareness.

Colorado Status - No Bill Yet, But the Clock Is Ticking

Colorado lawmakers did not advance a statewide kratom ban this session. That means kratom products - powders, capsules, extracts, shots - remain legally available in gas stations, vape shops, and online retailers across the state. Meanwhile, the FDA warns that kratom has no approved medical use and is not safe as a dietary supplement. Other states have seen hospitalizations, poisonings, and deaths rise sharply.

But the fight is not over. The next legislative session is the next opportunity. What happens between sessions - the evidence you gather, the allies you recruit, the voices you organize - determines whether Colorado will finally ban kratom or become another state with a weak, unenforceable "regulation" bill.

Your job right now: Build a coalition. Document retail sales. Educate lawmakers. Recruit medical, pharmacy, and law enforcement voices. The next session starts long before the first hearing is gaveled.

What You Can Do Right Now

Colorado Organizations & Stakeholders - Build the Coalition

Below are key Colorado groups that can influence future kratom policy. For each category, we explain why they matter and what to ask when you reach out. Use the contact links to start the conversation.

Law Enforcement & Public Safety

Why they matter: No field test means no enforcement. Law enforcement can explain to legislators why any "synthetic-only" or "potency-based" bill is impossible to police.

What to ask: "Will you support a full ban on all kratom products? Can you testify that the absence of a field test makes any regulatory bill unenforceable?"

Colorado State Patrol
csp.colorado.gov
Colorado Association of Chiefs of Police
colochiefs.org
County Sheriffs of Colorado
coloradosheriffs.org
Colorado Attorney General
coag.gov

Health & Poison Control

Why they matter: The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, Behavioral Health Administration, and Poison Center track substance use, poisoning data, and treatment needs. Their analysis can quantify the burden of kratom and support a ban.

What to ask: "Will you collect and share data on kratom-related emergency visits or poisonings? Will you support a legislative ban?"

Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment
cdphe.colorado.gov
Colorado Behavioral Health Administration
bha.colorado.gov
Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Safety
rmpds.org
Colorado Consortium for Prescription Drug Abuse Prevention
corxconsortium.org

Pharmacy

Why they matter: Pharmacists, the Board of Pharmacy, and pharmacy schools have direct knowledge of product safety, contamination risks, and the limitations of self-regulation. They can advocate for a complete ban.

What to ask: "Will your organization issue a public statement supporting a full statewide ban on kratom? Will you provide data on adverse events or poisoning calls?"

Colorado Board of Pharmacy
dpo.colorado.gov/Pharmacy
Colorado Pharmacists Society
copharm.org
University of Colorado Skaggs School of Pharmacy
pharmacy.cuanschutz.edu

Medical Associations

Why they matter: Physicians, pediatricians, and addiction specialists see kratom's harms firsthand. Their public statements carry significant weight with legislators.

What to ask: "Will your organization issue a public statement supporting a full statewide ban on kratom? Will you share data on kratom-related ER visits or poisonings?"

Colorado Medical Society
cms.org
Advocacy
Colorado Society of Addiction Medicine
cosam.us
ASAM Colorado Chapter
American Academy of Pediatrics - Colorado Chapter
aapcolorado.org
Colorado Hospital Association
cha.com
Contact

Addiction Treatment & Recovery Centers

Why they matter: These providers see the real-world consequences of kratom dependence - withdrawal, failed treatment attempts, and relapse. Their testimony can illustrate the addictive nature of kratom.

What to ask: "Will you support a statewide ban and provide testimony or written comments about the burden of kratom addiction on your programs?"

CeDAR - Center for Dependency, Addiction and Rehabilitation
cedarcolorado.org
Peer Assistance Services
peerassistanceservices.org
Sandstone Care Colorado
sandstonecare.com/colorado
AllHealth Network
allhealthnetwork.org

Additional State Agencies

Colorado Department of Human Services
cdhs.colorado.gov

Prepare Messages for Next Session

While no bill is active now, you can still reach out to state representatives and senators to plant the seed for a full ban. Use the template below to educate them about the dangers and the failure of "regulation" bills elsewhere.

Subject: Prepare for next session - Ban kratom, reject KCPA loopholes

"Dear Representative/Senator,

I am a constituent in [YOUR DISTRICT]. I urge you to prepare now to support a complete ban on all kratom products when the legislature reconvenes.

Kratom is an unregulated opioid sold in gas stations and vape shops. It contains lead and alcohol, causes addiction and withdrawal, and has been linked to overdose deaths. States that tried "regulation" (KCPA laws) saw no reduction in poisonings or hospitalizations - only full bans work.

Please commit now to introducing or supporting a clean Schedule I ban next session. No synthetic-only loopholes, no potency caps, no tax schemes. Only a complete removal of kratom from retail shelves will protect Colorado families.

Thank you."

Call Script for Stakeholder Outreach

When calling any of the above organizations:
"Hello, my name is [NAME] and I'm a concerned resident of Colorado. I'm calling to ask your organization to support a full ban on kratom in the next legislative session. Kratom is an unregulated opioid sold in gas stations. Regulation bills in other states have failed - only a ban works. Will your organization issue a public statement or contact legislators to support a ban? Thank you."

The Next Session Starts Now

Are you a healthcare professional, parent, educator, addiction specialist, law enforcement officer, or community advocate in Colorado?
Help prepare for the next legislative session by joining the Colorado anti-kratom network.

Contact Us to Get Involved Share the Evidence