Arizona (AZ) — What’s Legal
Checked Oct 13 2025 • Parent-friendly summary (not legal advice).
- Tianeptine: Not specifically scheduled statewide (as of 2025).
- Phenibut: Not scheduled; FDA says it is not a lawful dietary ingredient (misbranded if sold as a supplement).
- Kratom: Regulated under the Kratom Consumer Protection Act (2019): labeling, adulteration rules; no sales to minors.
- Nitrous oxide: Unlawful to sell containers to <18 (A.R.S. §13-3403.01); local ordinances add youth possession/use bans.
- THC / Cannabis: Adult-use legal via Prop 207 (A.R.S. Title 36 Ch. 28.2); 21+ possession and sales regulated.
- Salvia / Amanita: No statewide ban located; not scheduled but still subject to general product laws.
- “Mad honey”: No AZ-specific ban; treat as food with grayanotoxin risk (FDA/CDC language applies).
Parent tip: If you see capsules sold as “focus,” “relax,” or “boost,” check for DMHA, PEA, or kratom—those are drug-like add-ons.