Harlem
ManhattanUptown Manhattan — history on every block.
See dispensaries →Find licensed cannabis dispensaries across New York City, organized by neighborhood. It's all one site — pick your area below for the state-licensed shops nearby, each linking to its own page. Always confirm a shop on New York's official OCM list before you buy. For adults 21+.
Tap a pin to see a licensed shop, or pick a neighborhood below.
52A Kenmare St, New York, NY 10012
110 Chambers St, New York, NY 10007
474 Fashion Ave, New York, NY 10018
128 E 86th St, New York, NY 10028
122 E 25th St, New York, NY 10010
241 5th Ave, New York, NY 10016
459 Lexington Ave, New York, NY 10017
862 9th Ave, New York, NY 10019
1720 2nd Ave, New York, NY 10128
104 7th Ave, New York, NY 10011
85 Delancey St, New York, NY 10002
412 W Broadway, New York, NY 10012
33 Union Sq W, New York, NY 10003
481 Broadway, New York, NY 10013
701 8th Ave, New York, NY 10036
4441 BROADWAY, New York, NY 10040
22 W 66th St, New York, NY 10023
383 8th Ave, New York, NY 10001
2 Coenties Slip, New York, NY 10004
977 2nd Ave, New York, NY 10022
3 E 3rd St, New York, NY 10003
146 10th Ave, New York, NY 10011
248 W 125th St, New York, NY 10027
214 3rd Ave, New York, NY 10003
151 Dyckman St, New York, NY 10040
3858 Broadway, New York, NY 10032
519 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10022
224 1st Ave, New York, NY 10009
750 Broadway, New York, NY 10003
846 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10001
584 8th Ave, New York, NY 10018
698 2nd Ave, New York, NY 10016
157 W 72nd St, New York, NY 10023
186 Orchard St, New York, NY 10002
111 Fulton St, New York, NY 10038
334 E 73rd St, New York, NY 10021
1115 1st Ave, New York, NY 10065
381 Broadway, New York, NY 10013
820 2nd Ave, New York, NY 10017
386 Canal st, New York, NY 10013
799 Lexington Ave, New York, NY 10065
1536 Amsterdam Ave, New York, NY 10031
259 Bowery, New York, NY 10002
245 W 14th St, New York, NY 10011
797 8th Ave, New York, NY 10019
1819 2nd Ave, New York, NY 10128
381 5th Ave, New York, NY 10016
743 9th Ave, New York, NY 10019
405 W 39th St, New York, NY 10018
2119 Frederick Douglass Blvd, New York, NY 10026
15 Avenue B, New York, NY 10009
716 Amsterdam Ave, New York, NY 10025
1412 Broadway, New York, NY 10018
723 11th Ave, New York, NY 10019
129 Avenue C, New York, NY 10009
144 Bleecker St, New York, NY 10012
201 E 30th St, New York, NY 10016
229 Avenue B, New York, NY 10009
127 E 56th St, New York, NY 10022
704 W 177th St, New York, NY 10033
182 5th Ave, New York, NY 10010
3543 Broadway # 3547, New York, NY 10031
57 W 86th St, New York, NY 10024
1662 First Avenue, New York, NY 10028
2152 3rd Ave, New York, NY 10035
302 8th Ave, New York, NY 10001
719 7th Ave, New York, NY 10036
1190 Lexington Ave, New York, NY 10028
70 Canal St, New York, NY 10002
101 E 10th St, New York, NY 10003
2465 Broadway, New York, NY 10025
112 Christopher St, New York, NY 10014
1412 Lexington Ave, New York, NY 10128
2610 Broadway Ave, New York, NY 10025
587 5th Ave, New York, NY 10017
598 Broadway, New York, NY 10012
12 E 42nd St, New York, NY 10017
835 Broadway, New York, NY 10003
158 W 23rd St, New York, NY 10011
132 Metropolitan Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11249
3405 Avenue H, Brooklyn, NY 11210
2180 Clarendon Rd, Brooklyn, NY 11226
1102 Bedford Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11216
1077 Atlantic Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11238
1056 Flatbush Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11226
2225 Church Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11226
623 Bergen St, Brooklyn, NY 11238
3343 Fulton St, Brooklyn, NY 11208
321 4th Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11215
137 Court St, Brooklyn, NY 11201
946 FULTON STREET, Brooklyn, NY 11238
892 Wyckoff Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11237
435 5th Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11215
2 Jewel St, Brooklyn, NY 11222
483 3rd Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11215
875 Neptune Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11224
455 Graham Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11222
588 4th Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11215
2668 Coney Island Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11223
120 Union St, Brooklyn, NY 11231
2102 Ralph Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11234
539 Metropolitan Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11211
8112 5th Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11209
807 Manhattan Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11222
1118 Pennsylvania Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11207
300 Kent Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11249
572 Manhattan Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11222
3448 Nostrand Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11229
2370 Coney Island Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11223
834 Dekalb Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11221
225 Malcolm X Blvd, Brooklyn, NY 11221
453 Fulton St, Brooklyn, NY 11201
304 Ellery St, Brooklyn, NY 11206
7815 3rd Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11209
1019 Surf Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11224
152 Bedford Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11249
387 Van Brunt St., Brooklyn, NY 11231
515 Nostrand Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11216
64 Henry St, Brooklyn, NY 11201
8412 3rd Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11209
1413 Kings Hwy, Brooklyn, NY 11229
533 5th ave, Brooklyn, NY 11215
58 Greenpoint Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11222
299 Knickerbocker Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11237
2280 Flatbush Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11234
769 Franklin Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11238
1155 Liberty Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11208
1557 Fulton St, Brooklyn, NY 11216
288 flushing Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11205
733 Flatbush Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11226
3169 Coney Island Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11235
330 Tompkins Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11216
287 Harrison Pl, Brooklyn, NY 11237
61 N 11th St, Brooklyn, NY 11249
2441 Flatbush Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11234
237 Dekalb Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11205
1119 Broadway, Brooklyn, NY 11221
512 55th St, Brooklyn, NY 11220
85 Suydam St, Brooklyn, NY 11221
692 Grand St, Brooklyn, NY 11211
428 Rogers Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11225
154 Vanderbilt Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11205
118 Flatbush Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11217
1511 Neptune Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11224
2201 Avenue U, Brooklyn, NY 11229
301 Broadway, Brooklyn, NY 11211
360 7th Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11215
292 Atlantic Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11201
8137 Lefferts Blvd, Kew Gardens, NY 11415
20917 Northern Blvd, Bayside, NY 11361
3012 Astoria Blvd, Astoria, NY 11102
11119 Liberty Ave, South Richmond Hill, NY 11419
21546 39th Ave, Bayside, NY 11361
102-15 159th Road, Howard Beach, NY 11414
30-30 Steinway St, Astoria, NY 11103
21917 Hillside Ave, Queens Village, NY 11427
3264 85th St, East Elmhurst, NY 11370
90-67 Sutphin Blvd., Jamaica, NY 11435
245-02 Merrick Blvd, Rosedale, NY 11422
9605 Liberty Ave, Ozone Park, NY 11417
7110 Grand Ave, Maspeth, NY 11378
114-19 Rockaway Beach Blvd, Rockaway Park, NY 11694
217-12 Hempstead Ave, Queens Village, NY 11429
25306 Northern Blvd, Little Neck, NY 11362
16203 Jamaica Ave, Jamaica, NY 11432
135-26 Crossbay Blvd, Ozone Park, NY 11417
270-01 HILLSIDE AVE, Glen Oaks, NY 11004
214 24 73rd Ave, Oakland Garden, NY 11364
247-14 South Conduit Avenue, Rosedale, NY 11422
9538 Queens Blvd, Rego Park, NY 11374
465 Onderdonk Ave, Ridgewood, NY 11385
185-24 Horace Harding Expressway, Fresh Meadows, NY 11365
16105 29th Ave STORE, Flushing, NY 11358
14518 14th Ave, Whitestone, NY 11357
15748 Crossbay Blvd, Howard Beach, NY 11414
17501 Rockaway Blvd, Jamaica, NY 11434
2415 Queens Plz N Unit NR1, Long Island City, NY 11101
57-01 Myrtle Avenue, Ridgewood, NY 11385
24502 Horace Harding Expy, Little Neck, NY 11362
8701 Rockaway Beach Blvd, Rockaway Beach, NY 11693
22150 Horace Harding Expy, Bayside, NY 11364
24809 Jericho Tpke, Bellerose, NY 11426
1050 Jackson Ave, Long Island City, NY 11101
4215 Bell Blvd, Bayside, NY 11361
4445 Vernon Blvd, Long Island City, NY 11101
6633 Fresh Pond Rd, Ridgewood, NY 11385
16220 Northern Blvd, Flushing, NY 11358
4007 Queens Blvd # A, Sunnyside, NY 11104
24815 Union Tpke, Jamaica, NY 11426
7313 Beach Channel Dr, Arverne, NY 11692
662 Seneca Ave, Ridgewood, NY 11385
16630 Jamaica Ave, Jamaica, NY 11432
224-15 union Turnpike, Oakland gardens, NY 11364
23004 S Conduit Ave, Springfield Gardens, NY 11413
3610 Ditmars Blvd, Astoria, NY 11105
74-03 Metropolitan Avenue, Middle VIllage, NY 11379
6354 108th St, Forest Hills, NY 11375
6308 Woodhaven Blvd, Rego Park, NY 11374
14407 243rd St, Rosedale, NY 11422
9229 Queens Blvd, Rego Park, NY 11374
2721 44th Dr, Long Island City, NY 11101
31-35 Steinway St, Astoria, NY 11103
12420 Liberty Ave, South Richmond Hill, NY 11419
50-12 72nd Street, Woodside, NY 11377
272-06 UNION TURNPIKE, New Hyde Park, NY 11040
2034 Jerome Ave, Bronx, NY 10453
925 Hunts Point Ave, Bronx, NY 10459
2935 3rd Ave, Bronx, NY 10455
3430 Boston rd, Bronx, NY 10467
898 Gerard Ave, Bronx, NY 10452
2412 3rd Ave, Bronx, NY 10454
3633 Kingsbridge Ave, Bronx, NY 10463
2375 Arthur Ave, Bronx, NY 10458
1031 Southern Blvd, Bronx, NY 10459
2500 Arthur Ave, Bronx, NY 10458
372 E Fordham Rd, Bronx, NY 10458
3220 Westchester Ave, Bronx, NY 10461
2460 Williamsbridge Rd Fl 1, Bronx, NY 10469
53 West Fordham Rd., Bronx, NY 10468
1798 E Tremont Ave, Bronx, NY 10460
3551 Boston Rd, Bronx, NY 10469
3764 E Tremont Ave, Bronx, NY 10465
4219 Webster Ave, Bronx, NY 10470
784 Allerton Ave, Bronx, NY 10467
696 East 241st St, Bronx, NY 10470
1547 Arthur Kill Road, Staten Island, NY 10312
4034 Hylan Blvd, Staten Island, NY 10308
755 Forest Ave, Staten Island, NY 10310
465 Forest Ave, Staten Island, NY 10301
1399 Hylan Blvd, Staten Island, NY 10305
1938 Clove Rd, Staten Island, NY 10304
1350 Forest Ave, Staten Island, NY 10302
956 Jewett Ave, Staten Island, NY 10314
2059 Richmond Ave, Staten Island, NY 10314
3022 Veterans Rd W, Staten Island, NY 10309
1151 Hylan Blvd, Staten Island, NY 10305
4906 Arthur Kill Road, Staten Island, NY 10309
2343 Forest Ave, Staten Island, NY 10303
Uptown Manhattan — history on every block.
See dispensaries →Downtown energy, late nights, and plenty of storefronts.
See dispensaries →Tight streets, big nightlife — and plenty of look-alike storefronts.
See dispensaries →Galleries, the High Line, and steady demand.
See dispensaries →A residential stretch between Central Park and Riverside Park, anchored by the brownstone blocks and pre-war buildings along Broadway, Amsterdam, and Columbus Avenues.
See dispensaries →A hilly Upper Manhattan neighborhood between the Hudson and Harlem Rivers, known for its Dominican community and the bustling commercial spine of St. Nicholas Avenue and 181st Street.
See dispensaries →A dense Lower Manhattan enclave of street markets, restaurants, and shops centered on Canal, Mott, and Bowery Streets.
See dispensaries →Also known as El Barrio, this Upper Manhattan neighborhood north of the Upper East Side runs along Lexington and Third Avenues and 116th Street with a strong Puerto Rican and Latino heritage.
See dispensaries →A quiet, upscale Lower Manhattan loft district of cobblestoned blocks, cast-iron warehouses, and Hudson River Park, where polish isn't proof of a license.
See dispensaries →A packed cast-iron historic shopping district along Broadway, Spring, and Prince Streets, thick with tourists and look-alike storefronts.
See dispensaries →A young-professional Midtown East neighborhood of Third Avenue bars, the Curry Hill restaurant row on Lexington, Grand Central commuter density, and quiet brownstone side streets.
See dispensaries →A genteel, historic district around the private key-only Gramercy Park, with landmarked townhouses, Irving Place, the Union Square edge, and Baruch College nearby.
See dispensaries →Manhattan's green northern tip, home to the island's last natural forest at Inwood Hill Park, with a strong Dominican community along the Dyckman Street and Broadway corridors and the A and 1 trains.
See dispensaries →A historic West Harlem neighborhood of landmarked rowhouses and the Sugar Hill enclave, home to the City College of New York and Hamilton Grange, with its commercial life along Broadway and the 1 train.
See dispensaries →The quiet, residential eastern edge of the Upper East Side, east of Third Avenue — pre-war apartment houses and walk-ups, Carl Schurz Park and Gracie Mansion on the river, the new Second Avenue Q line, the 86th Street shopping strip, and the lingering traces of its old German, Hungarian, and Czech heart.
See dispensaries →A transitional waterfront pocket on the Lower East Side and Chinatown edge under the Manhattan and Brooklyn Bridges, where old-law tenements and public housing sit beside new glass towers and a diverse Chinese and Latino community lines East Broadway and the side streets.
See dispensaries →A small, fashionable district North of Little Italy, with boutique-dense blocks of Mulberry, Mott, and Elizabeth Streets, café tables, and Old St. Patrick's between SoHo and the Bowery.
See dispensaries →Lower Manhattan's financial core — Wall Street, the Stock Exchange, and historic Stone Street, with a tourist crush near the Charging Bull, the Battery Park waterfront, and a fast-growing residential population among the towers.
See dispensaries →A narrow, self-contained residential island in the East River reached by the iconic aerial tram, the F train, or the single bridge to Queens, home to Cornell Tech, Main Street, and FDR Four Freedoms Park.
See dispensaries →A geographic oddity that's legally part of Manhattan but physically attached to the Bronx mainland north of the Harlem River Ship Canal, running along Broadway near Kingsbridge with the 1 train and Metro-North.
See dispensaries →A small, landmarked cast-iron loft district North of Houston, between Greenwich Village and the East Village, with boutiques, galleries, and grand architecture along Bond Street, Lafayette, and Great Jones near the Astor Place edge.
See dispensaries →Manhattan's shrinking historic Italian enclave around Mulberry Street, home to the Feast of San Gennaro and tourist-heavy restaurant rows, blending into Nolita and Chinatown between Canal and Broome Streets.
See dispensaries →The affluent, culture-heavy lower corner of the Upper West Side around Lincoln Center, Juilliard, and Columbus Circle, with high-rise co-ops and polished storefronts along Broadway, Columbus, and Amsterdam.
See dispensaries →Manhattan's brand-new far-West-Side mega-development of glass office and residential towers, the Vessel, the Shed, luxury retail, and the High Line's northern end at the 7 train terminus.
See dispensaries →North Brooklyn's design-forward core, with one of the city's densest clusters of licensed shops.
See dispensaries →Loud, creative, and full of licensed storefronts along the L.
See dispensaries →Brownstone Brooklyn — calmer streets, careful shoppers.
See dispensaries →Historic, central, and increasingly well-served by licensed shops.
See dispensaries →A boardwalk-side enclave known as 'Little Odessa,' where Russian and Eastern European groceries, bakeries, and restaurants line Brighton Beach Avenue under the elevated Q train.
See dispensaries →A waterfront neighborhood built around its namesake bay, with seafood spots, fishing piers, and the Emmons Avenue promenade meeting busy Sheepshead Bay Road.
See dispensaries →Brooklyn's iconic beachfront amusement district, home to the Cyclone, the Wonder Wheel, Nathan's Famous, and the Riegelmann Boardwalk along Surf Avenue.
See dispensaries →One of Brooklyn's original colonial towns, now a residential South Brooklyn neighborhood centered on McDonald Avenue and the shops along Avenue U.
See dispensaries →A historically Italian-American neighborhood with a growing Chinese community, anchored by the family-owned shops of 18th Avenue and the elevated stretch of 86th Street.
See dispensaries →A leafy southwestern neighborhood with views of the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge, a busy Third Avenue restaurant row, and the 86th Street shopping corridor.
See dispensaries →A quiet waterfront residential peninsula in southeast Brooklyn, ringed by Jamaica Bay inlets and anchored by the shops along Avenue U.
See dispensaries →A family-oriented south Brooklyn neighborhood built around the borough's largest park, with low-rise blocks off Avenue U and Flatbush Avenue.
See dispensaries →A diverse, hilly waterfront neighborhood known for its namesake park, Brooklyn's Chinatown along Eighth Avenue, and the Industry City complex.
See dispensaries →A dense, vibrant central Brooklyn neighborhood with Caribbean roots, lined by the bustling shops of Flatbush Avenue south of Prospect Park.
See dispensaries →A historic central Brooklyn neighborhood of grand row houses and brownstones, centered on the tree-lined Eastern Parkway and the Franklin Avenue corridor.
See dispensaries →Brooklyn's northernmost neighborhood, a Polish-rooted waterfront enclave of low-rise rowhouses along Manhattan Avenue and Franklin Street.
See dispensaries →A historic district of brownstone-lined streets around Fort Greene Park, anchored by the Brooklyn Academy of Music and DeKalb Avenue.
See dispensaries →A leafy Italian-American enclave known for deep front gardens and the brownstone-lined Court Street and Smith Street corridors.
See dispensaries →A compact, tree-lined neighborhood between Vanderbilt Avenue and Washington Avenue, edged by Barclays Center and Eastern Parkway.
See dispensaries →A quiet, leafy brownstone enclave around Cobble Hill Park, with the boutiques of Court Street and the restaurant row of Smith Street.
See dispensaries →A fast-changing, post-industrial neighborhood along the Gowanus Canal, where warehouses turned venues and breweries sit beside new towers and the Third Avenue Whole Foods.
See dispensaries →A quiet brownstone neighborhood between Cobble Hill and Fort Greene, known for the boutiques and restaurants of Smith Street and the antique dealers and Middle Eastern shops of Atlantic Avenue.
See dispensaries →A leafy historic district of grand Clinton Avenue mansions and brownstones built around the Pratt Institute campus, with restaurants and shops along Myrtle Avenue and Fulton Street.
See dispensaries →A cut-off waterfront peninsula with no subway — cobblestone streets, the big-box anchors and old Fairway building, Valentino Pier's Statue of Liberty view, a maker-and-artist scene, and the summer ball-field food, all reached only by bus, ferry, bike, or car.
See dispensaries →A quiet, single-family South Brooklyn neighborhood with deep Italian-American roots, famous for its over-the-top December Christmas-lights blocks and the Dyker Beach golf course, tucked between Bay Ridge and Bensonhurst.
See dispensaries →A densely residential South Brooklyn neighborhood home to one of the largest Orthodox and Hasidic Jewish communities anywhere, with the 13th Avenue shopping corridor at the center of daily life and many businesses closed from Friday evening through Saturday for Shabbos.
See dispensaries →A diverse, tree-lined central Brooklyn neighborhood anchored by Brooklyn College and the busy Avenue J and Kings Highway shopping strips, where Orthodox Jewish, Pakistani, and many other communities shop side by side.
See dispensaries →A spread-out, deeply Caribbean-American neighborhood at the far southeast edge of Brooklyn, where the L train ends at Rockaway Parkway and streets of one- and two-family homes run down to Canarsie Pier on Jamaica Bay.
See dispensaries →A dense, remarkably diverse central-Brooklyn neighborhood south of Prospect Park, where 'Little Bangladesh' lines McDonald Avenue under the elevated F train and the shops of Church Avenue and Coney Island Avenue serve a dozen communities.
See dispensaries →A brownstone-and-limestone community on Prospect Park's eastern edge, with deep Caribbean-American roots, the landmarked Lefferts Manor blocks, and the Lincoln Road and Flatbush Avenue corridors near the B, Q, and S trains.
See dispensaries →A leafy Victorian Flatbush enclave of grand freestanding wooden houses and deeply diverse blocks, anchored by the cafe-and-restaurant strip of Cortelyou Road and the Coney Island Avenue corridor on the B and Q line.
See dispensaries →A small, affluent residential enclave at Brooklyn's southern tip, east of Brighton Beach, with large single-family homes, quiet streets, a near-private beach feel, and Kingsborough Community College out at the peninsula's end.
See dispensaries →A large, diverse, working-class neighborhood at Brooklyn's far eastern edge, knit together by the Broadway Junction transit hub (A/C/J/Z/L) and the long Atlantic, Fulton, and Pitkin Avenue corridors, and reshaped by recent rezoning and new development.
See dispensaries →Queens' most walkable neighborhood — diverse, busy, and growing its menu.
See dispensaries →Towers, waterfront, and a fast-growing set of licensed shops.
See dispensaries →A bustling north-central Queens commercial hub and one of the city's largest Asian communities, centered on the busy intersection of Main Street and Roosevelt Avenue.
See dispensaries →A diverse, garden-apartment historic district between Northern Boulevard and Roosevelt Avenue, known for its South Asian and Latin American shops along 74th Street and 37th Avenue.
See dispensaries →A leafy central Queens neighborhood known for its Tudor-style Forest Hills Gardens and the shops and restaurants lining Austin Street and Queens Boulevard.
See dispensaries →A historic neighborhood on the Brooklyn-Queens border known for its rows of yellow-brick houses and the commercial strip along Myrtle Avenue and Fresh Pond Road.
See dispensaries →A walkable western Queens neighborhood centered on Queens Boulevard and the planned community of Sunnyside Gardens, with shops along Greenpoint and Skillman Avenues.
See dispensaries →A densely populated and highly diverse central Queens neighborhood anchored by the shopping along Broadway, Grand Avenue, and Queens Boulevard.
See dispensaries →A working-class western Queens neighborhood under the elevated 7 train, known for its Irish pubs and Filipino businesses along Roosevelt Avenue and 61st Street.
See dispensaries →A busy, big-box central Queens neighborhood along Queens Boulevard, anchored by the Rego Center mall, large-format stores, and the older shopping strip on 63rd Drive serving a large Bukharian community.
See dispensaries →A leafy, suburban-feeling neighborhood in northeast Queens, known for the bars and restaurants of its Bell Boulevard nightlife strip, the LIRR station, and the Bay Terrace shopping area near the water.
See dispensaries →A dense, heavily Latino Queens neighborhood built around the Roosevelt Avenue corridor under the elevated 7 train, the food carts of Corona Plaza, and the green edge of Flushing Meadows–Corona Park.
See dispensaries →A historic, Victorian-housed Queens neighborhood whose Liberty Avenue corridor is the heart of 'Little Guyana,' lined with Indo-Caribbean roti shops, sari and puja stores, and a large Punjabi Sikh community.
See dispensaries →A leafy, planned garden neighborhood of Tudor-style apartment houses at the edge of Forest Park, home to the Queens courthouse and civic district and the busy LIRR and E/F hub at Kew Gardens–Union Turnpike.
See dispensaries →A dense, diverse southwestern Queens neighborhood of row houses built along the long Cross Bay Boulevard retail spine, under the elevated A train near Aqueduct Racetrack and the approaches to JFK.
See dispensaries →A quiet, car-dependent corner of northeast Queens with single-family blocks behind tidy lawns, an Italian, Greek, and East Asian mix, the Whitestone Bridge overhead, and Francis Lewis Park on the East River — and no subway, so shops are a drive away.
See dispensaries →An insular, Italian-American waterfront community in southwest Queens near JFK, with the canals and stilted blocks of Hamilton Beach, Spring Creek Park on the marsh, the Cross Bay Boulevard retail spine, and the A train at its edge.
See dispensaries →A quiet, transit-light working- and middle-class pocket of central Queens with Polish and Italian-American roots, anchored by the Grand Avenue shops and the industrial banks of Newtown Creek.
See dispensaries →A calm, low-density residential neighborhood in central Queens built around Juniper Valley Park and the vast All Faiths cemeteries, with single-family homes and the Metropolitan Avenue shops at the quiet end of the M line.
See dispensaries →A quiet, German- and Italian-rooted residential pocket of central Queens with no subway of its own, anchored by the family-run shops along Myrtle Avenue and The Shops at Atlas Park, with Forest Park along its northern edge.
See dispensaries →A working-class, diverse, heavily Latino neighborhood strung along Jamaica Avenue under the elevated J and Z trains, with blocks of historic frame houses and Forest Park on its northern edge.
See dispensaries →The diverse oceanfront community at the eastern end of the Rockaway peninsula, out where the A train terminates at Mott Avenue, with a tight-knit Caribbean, Black, and Orthodox Jewish mix, the beach blocks along the Atlantic, and the quiet waterfront of nearby Bayswater on Jamaica Bay.
See dispensaries →The surf-and-boardwalk stretch of the Rockaway peninsula around Beach 90th to 116th, home to New York City's legal surfing beach, the boardwalk and beach concessions, a tight year-round beach-town community, and the Beach 116th Street shopping strip — served by the A train, the Rockaway Park S shuttle, and the seasonal NYC Ferry.
See dispensaries →A quiet, leafy, planned garden-apartment community in northeast Queens, framed by the Long Island Expressway and the Horace Harding corridor and bordering St. John's University, with curving tree-lined streets, no subway, and a car-and-bus rhythm all its own.
See dispensaries →A spread-out, single-family residential neighborhood in southeast Queens with a large Caribbean and South Asian community, its commercial life stretched along Jamaica Avenue, Hillside Avenue, and Springfield Boulevard and anchored by the Queens Village LIRR station.
See dispensaries →An out-of-the-way northern Queens peninsula on the East River, mixing the big-box stores and warehouses of the College Point Corporate Park with quiet residential blocks, far from the subway near LaGuardia and Flushing.
See dispensaries →An affluent, leafy far-northeast Queens neighborhood at the Nassau border, home to the historic Douglas Manor enclave, the LIRR station, and quiet suburban streets sloping down toward Little Neck Bay.
See dispensaries →A leafy, hilly residential enclave in the northwest Bronx running along Riverdale Avenue above the Hudson River, with Van Cortlandt Park to its east.
See dispensaries →A dense, bustling commercial hub of the west Bronx centered on the Fordham Road shopping strip, home to Fordham University's Rose Hill campus and the New York Botanical Garden.
See dispensaries →A historic South Bronx neighborhood of cast-iron storefronts and converted warehouses, anchored by the East 138th Street corridor and the Bruckner Boulevard arts district.
See dispensaries →A settled, residential neighborhood at the northeast tip of the Bronx, wrapped around Pelham Bay Park — the city's largest park — with its commercial life along Westchester Avenue near the 6 train's last stop.
See dispensaries →A residential South Bronx peninsula ringed by the Bronx River and the East River, with Soundview Park at its tip and its retail along Story, Lafayette, and Westchester Avenues near the 6 line.
See dispensaries →A low-rise, car-dependent waterfront peninsula in the southeast Bronx, ringed by marinas and boat clubs under the Throgs Neck Bridge, with thin, spread-out retail along East Tremont Avenue and Bruckner Boulevard.
See dispensaries →A tight, family-run Italian-American and Albanian-American enclave of low-rise residential streets, strung along the bakeries and trattorias of Morris Park Avenue beside the Einstein and Jacobi medical campus.
See dispensaries →A tiny nautical village at the far eastern edge of the Bronx, barely a mile and a half of seafood restaurants, marinas, and antique shops strung along City Island Avenue and reached by a single bridge.
See dispensaries →The Bronx's real Little Italy, a celebrated food-destination main street where Arthur Avenue's bakeries, pork stores, cheese shops, and the 1940 Arthur Avenue Retail Market draw visitors from across the region.
See dispensaries →A self-contained 1940s Metropolitan Life development of brick towers in the east-central Bronx, laid out around the Metropolitan Oval and the Hugh Grant Circle hub, with a diverse Bangladeshi, Latino, and Black community along Westchester and Metropolitan Avenues.
See dispensaries →A busy, hilly shopping district in the northwest Bronx near the Harlem River, built along the Broadway corridor under the 1 train, in the shadow of the old Kingsbridge Armory and a short hop from Riverdale and Van Cortlandt Park.
See dispensaries →A South Bronx neighborhood built around The Hub, the busiest discount-shopping district in the borough where East 149th Street meets Third, Willis, and Melrose Avenues, with deep Puerto Rican and Latino roots and the 2 and 5 trains.
See dispensaries →A hilly west-Bronx neighborhood rising from the Harlem River up steep step-streets toward the Grand Concourse, named for the High Bridge — New York's oldest standing bridge — next to Yankee Stadium, with a Latino and Black community and the 4, B, and D trains.
See dispensaries →A hilly, densely residential pocket on the Bronx's high ground, built around Williamsbridge Oval and Montefiore Medical Center, with a deeply mixed Dominican, Irish, Bangladeshi, and West African community along Bainbridge and Webster Avenues.
See dispensaries →The northernmost neighborhood in the Bronx, on the Westchester and Mount Vernon line, with a strong Jamaican and Caribbean community along the West Indian bakeries and shops of White Plains Road and the 2 train's end-of-the-line terminus at 241st Street.
See dispensaries →Staten Island's civic and transit gateway on the borough's northeast tip, built around the St. George Ferry Terminal and the Bay Street and Richmond Terrace waterfront.
See dispensaries →The southernmost neighborhood in all of New York City — a quiet Victorian shore town at the end of the Staten Island Railway, anchored by Conference House Park and the Main Street and Hylan Boulevard corridors near the bay.
See dispensaries →A south-shore Staten Island neighborhood built around Great Kills Harbor and its marinas, with the Gateway-run Great Kills Park along the shore and most of its retail on the Hylan Boulevard corridor.
See dispensaries →A settled, suburban mid-island Staten Island neighborhood of single-family blocks whose commercial life runs down the New Dorp Lane main-street strip, near the Staten Island Railway station, Miller Field, and the South Beach shoreline.
See dispensaries →A dense, diverse, walkable North Shore Staten Island neighborhood just below the St. George ferry terminal, built around historic Tappen Park, the Bay Street commercial corridor, and the redeveloped waterfront where the Navy's old Homeport once stood.
See dispensaries →One of Staten Island's oldest commercial centers, a historic North Shore neighborhood built around the Port Richmond Avenue 'strip' — a long, walkable corridor of century-old storefronts, taquerias and Mexican groceries from a fast-growing Latino community, and discount shops, with the Bayonne Bridge rising at the foot of the avenue over the Kill Van Kull.
See dispensaries →A North Shore Staten Island neighborhood between St. George and the cemeteries, mixing the Forest Avenue shopping corridor with quiet residential blocks of older homes, and home to the Snug Harbor Cultural Center and Botanical Garden out on the Kill Van Kull waterfront.
See dispensaries →A dense, diverse, walkable North Shore Staten Island neighborhood just south of the St. George ferry terminal, where Victory Boulevard's Sri Lankan, West African, and Latino storefronts climb the hill and Bay Street runs the waterfront, anchored by Tompkinsville Park and its own Staten Island Railway stop.
See dispensaries →A car-dependent, suburban mid-island Staten Island district built around the Staten Island Mall and the big-box plazas of the Richmond Avenue corridor, with the wooded Staten Island Greenbelt wrapping its western and southern edges.
See dispensaries →A car-dependent South Shore Staten Island neighborhood of single-family homes with a tight-knit Italian-American community, built around the Eltingville Transit Center park-and-ride and the long Amboy Road and Richmond Avenue corridors.
See dispensaries →A quiet, leafy mid-island Staten Island neighborhood with deep temperance-movement roots — once the community of Prohibition Park — built around Westerleigh Park and blocks of single-family Victorian and colonial homes, near Willowbrook and the College of Staten Island.
See dispensaries →BudAboutis a review and content brand — we don't sell or deliver cannabis, and we don't lab-test. Always confirm a shop's license on New York's official OCM list. For adults 21+.

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Cannabis products are for adults 21 and older. Please enjoy responsibly.