Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO - New York, New York - JointCommerce
Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO logo

Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO

Recreational Retail

Address: 412 West Broadway New York, New York 10012

Average Rating: 0.00 / 5 Stars

0 Reviews

Brands at Dispensary Visit Menu

About

Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO is a recreational retail dispensary located in New York, New York.

Amenities

  • Cash
  • Accepts debit cards

Buy at Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO's Store

Languages

  • English

Description of Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO

Dagmar Cannabis sits in the heart of one of Manhattan’s most walked, photographed, and commercially active districts. The company’s New York, New York presence places it within the 10012 ZIP Code, an area that includes SoHo, NoHo, parts of Greenwich Village, and a slice of Nolita. That neighborhood context matters if you’re comparing dispensaries or planning a visit, because the way people move through 10012, the hours when streets are clogged or calm, and the community’s expectations for safe, regulated cannabis all shape the experience you’ll have at a dispensary like Dagmar Cannabis.

The neighborhood and what it means for a dispensary experience in 10012
SoHo’s ground-floor retail stretches and cast-iron facades create a streetscape designed for browsing. There are galleries and boutiques on side streets like Greene, Wooster, and Crosby; chain and flagship stores along Broadway; and steady daytime traffic on larger avenues like Lafayette Street and Sixth Avenue. This means daytime foot traffic is intense, evenings are lively but not chaotic, and weekday mornings can be surprisingly navigable. That pattern influences how a dispensary in 10012 staffs its front door, organizes the sales floor, and manages pickups. Expect a professional ID check at the entrance during peak hours, a clear flow from reception to the sales counters, and queue systems that keep browsers moving while accommodating pre-order pickups. The rhythm of the block changes by the hour, and a dispensary that serves office workers before lunch, visitors throughout the afternoon, and locals after work needs to be nimble. Dagmar Cannabis operates in that reality, which is why it pays to know a bit about routes, timing, and how locals actually buy legal cannabis in Manhattan.

Driving to Dagmar Cannabis: routes that work and times to avoid
If you plan to drive to a dispensary around Broadway and Houston or within a few blocks of Lafayette and West Broadway, the approach matters more than the distance. 10012 is bounded by big east-west corridors but threaded with narrow, often one-way cross streets. Houston Street, Canal Street, Prince Street, Spring Street, and Bleecker Street do much of the crosstown work. Broadway runs north–south through the center of the ZIP Code, and it carries steady bus and taxi volume throughout the day. Lafayette Street and the Bowery move traffic on the east side of SoHo and NoHo, while Sixth Avenue (Avenue of the Americas) is the west-side northbound artery that feeds into Houston Street and connects the West Village to SoHo. The route you choose should balance predictability with minimal left turns and an exit plan that doesn’t force you onto Broadway during the busiest windows.

From New Jersey via the Holland Tunnel, you’ll exit into Lower Manhattan near Canal Street. As you come out of the tunnel onto Canal, if your target is within 10012, resist the urge to push east on Canal for too long. Canal, Broome, and Watts often act as overflow for tunnel queues and delivery trucks, especially from midafternoon into the early evening. A reliable play is to take Varick Street north from the tunnel and shift east on West Houston Street. From there, the grid opens; you can turn onto LaGuardia Place, Mercer Street, or Lafayette Street, or continue to Broadway depending on how close you need to get. West Houston is a dependable crosstown spine for SoHo and NoHo access, and it positions you to approach Dagmar Cannabis from the east or west without being trapped in tunnel-related congestion.

If you’re coming down the West Side Highway (NY‑9A) from the Upper West Side or from uptown, exit toward Houston Street and proceed east on West Houston. That keeps you off the densest retail blocks until the last couple of minutes of the trip. If you overshoot, Spring Street, Prince Street, and Bleecker provide another set of east–west options, but each is narrower and subject to double-parked trucks serving nearby shops and restaurants. When traffic is moving, the West Side Highway to Houston approach is often the least stressful way to reach a dispensary in 10012 by car.

Travelers from the East Side typically ride the FDR Drive and exit for Houston Street. The Houston Street exit is direct and lands you on the eastern flank of the neighborhood near the Bowery. From there, Lafayette Street is a clean northbound path into NoHo and SoHo without the Broadway bus lanes and heavy taxi stops. If you overshoot or the Bowery is jammed, take a westbound turn on East Houston and weave to Crosby, Mercer, or Wooster to get closer to your destination. The Bowery and Lafayette handle traffic better than Broadway during peak midday shopping, especially when tour buses cycle through.

From Brooklyn across the Williamsburg Bridge, Delancey Street feeds directly into the Lower East Side and the Bowery. The easiest method is to run the Bowery north to East Houston and cut west into 10012, or continue up to Bleecker if you want to avoid Houston’s loading zones. If you arrive via the Manhattan Bridge, Canal Street is unavoidable for a few blocks, but you can escape north sooner than later by turning onto Centre Street and then Lafayette, which puts you into a more forgiving flow than Broadway. Those maneuvers matter on Saturdays and Sundays between late morning and late afternoon when retail traffic and street fairs are common.

From Midtown via the Lincoln Tunnel, Dyer Avenue to Ninth Avenue is your starting point. Run Ninth Avenue south and then use West Houston to reach SoHo. Evening commuting hours can crowd Ninth from Chelsea through the West Village, so if your timing is flexible, aim for late morning or early afternoon. Early evenings on weekdays are among the most congested windows for reaching any dispensary in 10012 by car.

It’s also worth acknowledging the area’s street geometry. Many SoHo and NoHo blocks are cobblestoned, and curb space is limited. One-way flows dominate side streets like Crosby and Mercer, and Broadway’s bus lanes are enforced. Left turns from Broadway are restricted at several intersections. All of that makes your exit plan as important as your arrival. If you park in a garage east of Broadway, consider retracing to Lafayette and then south or north before cutting back west; if you park west of Broadway, Sixth Avenue northbound offers a straightforward way out.

Parking realities around a 10012 dispensary
On-street parking in 10012 is scarce during the business day and competitive in the evening. Metered spots turn over quickly but are often filled by service vehicles around midday. Alternate side regulations thin street parking on scheduled mornings and afternoons, so availability can be unpredictable. If you plan to drive to Dagmar Cannabis, assume you’ll use a garage. There are multiple garages within a short walk on streets like Crosby, Lafayette, Mercer, West Broadway, and Thompson. Rates vary with time of day and event calendars, and some garages post higher rates during weekend shopping surges. Mobile parking apps can help you reserve in advance, and if you’re picking up a quick pre-order, a short-stay rate might make sense. Curbside “quick stop” zones in SoHo are limited; double-parking invites a ticket, and enforcement is active. Many locals conclude that driving is workable if you’re coming from the West Side Highway or FDR and going directly to a garage. For quick visits, subway or rideshare often reduce stress.

When traffic is easiest
The sweetest spot for driving into SoHo and NoHo for a dispensary visit is typically weekday late mornings before lunch, or later evenings on weeknights after 8 p.m. Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. are the most sluggish, with Broadway especially slow and cross streets blocked by delivery activity. Sundays can be better, but seasonal street fairs and filming permits occasionally close blocks and reroute flows. The City frequently schedules street work at night; check NYC DOT advisories if you’re timing a late run.

How locals in New York buy legal cannabis in practice
Most New Yorkers don’t treat dispensary visits as errands to linger over unless they’re specifically browsing something new. They decide what to buy online, use the store’s real-time menu, and either place a pre-order for pickup or arrange delivery if the retailer offers it. Dagmar Cannabis operates within New York’s adult-use framework, which means age verification at the door and again at the register, products that are lab tested and labeled, child-resistant packaging, and posted license verification, including a QR code issued by the New York State Office of Cannabis Management (OCM). Locals are increasingly savvy about that QR code; after a long run of unlicensed shops in 2022–2024, residents and hotel concierges routinely steer buyers to licensed dispensaries with the OCM-verified signage.

The gear people bring to a dispensary visit is simple: a government-issued photo ID showing they are 21 or older, and a payment method. Credit cards are still uncommon in New York dispensaries. Most retailers accept cash and debit via PIN or a cashless ATM system; some now offer ACH bank transfers or tap-to-pay debit. If you plan to do delivery, have your ID ready upon receipt; the person who placed the order must typically be the person who receives it, and delivery cannot be made to public spaces. Many Manhattan dispensaries deliver to residences, hotels, and offices within a defined radius, often below 96th Street, with bike couriers or cars depending on distance and weather.

Shopping behavior in 10012 follows a few patterns. After-work windows between 5 and 7 p.m. produce lines; pre-orders save time and usually move through a dedicated queue. Lunchtime foot traffic creates a short spike, then tapers until late afternoon. Weekend afternoons bring visitors who are new to New York’s cannabis system; staff spend more time explaining dosing, product types, and New York’s rules around public consumption. As of now, on-site consumption lounges are not part of the 10012 retail landscape, so purchases are for takeout only, and consumption follows New York’s general rules: adults may consume where tobacco smoking is permitted, but not in cars, schools, or workplaces. Driving under the influence is illegal, and dispensary staff will remind buyers to plan transportation accordingly.

Purchase limits in New York are generous but not unlimited. Adults can buy up to three ounces of cannabis flower and up to 24 grams of concentrated cannabis in a single transaction, a cap that aligns with possession limits under state law. Edible packages are typically limited to 10 milligrams THC per serving and 100 milligrams THC per package, and labels show cannabinoids per serving and per package. Taxes are transparent at checkout: New York imposes a 13 percent retail excise tax on adult-use cannabis sales, comprised of a 9 percent state portion and 4 percent local portion. Retailers display the final price with tax on e-receipts and printed receipts.

Product selection in 10012 reflects the broader Manhattan mix. Prerolls and 3.5‑gram jars of flower are staples for locals who prefer clear lineage and terpene data. Vape cartridges and all-in-one disposables move quickly with commuters who want low-odor convenience. Gummies and fast-acting edibles are popular with visitors who prefer predictable, labeled dosing. Topicals, tinctures with balanced CBD:THC ratios, and beverages have grown steadily as the state’s licensed supply chain matures. Many shoppers filter menus by dominant terpenes, looking for limonene or pinene for daytime focus or myrcene and linalool for evening relaxation, an approach encouraged by staff who are trained to discuss effects without overpromising outcomes. New Yorkers also pay attention to where products are grown and manufactured. The state’s microbusinesses and small cultivators, including those in the Hudson Valley, Finger Lakes, and North Country, now appear more prominently on shelves, and several dispensaries emphasize New York-grown sourcing.

How payment, returns, and privacy work
Because cannabis remains federally illegal, dispensaries treat transactions differently from typical retail. Expect payment terminals that prompt for a PIN even when you’re using a debit card. Cash is always accepted, and ATMs are common in-store. Receipts list product names, lot numbers, and taxes, but most retailers do not share your purchase history beyond their own loyalty programs. Loyalty sign-ups are opt-in; locals who value privacy often decline, while frequent buyers may opt in for discounts or early access to limited drops. Returns are rare and usually restricted to defective hardware; state rules and safety concerns make it difficult to accept returns of consumable cannabis. If you have a hardware issue with a vape battery or cartridge, bring the component and receipt; most licensed retailers will swap or credit per their policy.

Why licensed matters to locals
A theme you’ll hear around Dagmar Cannabis and other licensed dispensaries is testing and traceability. Every legal product in New York’s adult-use system is tracked from seed to sale. Labels display cannabinoid content, manufacturer, batch, and lab test results for microbials, heavy metals, residual solvents, and pesticides. It’s a response to an era when many unlicensed storefronts sold untested products, and it’s now a baseline expectation. Licensed dispensaries also adhere to safe storage rules, which is why you’ll see child-resistant packaging, exit bags, and lockable pouches. Safe storage has become a citywide health message; several Manhattan dispensaries participate in campaigns encouraging adults to store cannabis up and away from children and pets. That messaging aligns with NYC Department of Health guidance and is increasingly visible in 10012 storefronts.

Health initiatives and community involvement around 10012
The neighborhood around Dagmar Cannabis sits within Manhattan Community Board 2, one of the city’s most active civic bodies, with committees focused on licensing, public safety, traffic, and sanitation. Dispensaries in 10012 often engage with CB2 to discuss operating hours, crowd management, and neighborhood impact. The Soho Broadway Initiative, a Business Improvement District, runs a Clean Team that keeps sidewalks tidy and supports public realm improvements; it also convenes retail safety sessions that dispensary operators attend alongside other ground-floor businesses. Those efforts, while not specific to a single brand, create a more orderly environment for cannabis retail in SoHo and NoHo.

On the health front, New York City continues its “Cannabis Conversations” campaign, a public education initiative that addresses adult decision-making, youth prevention, and impairment. Licensed dispensaries in 10012 echo those messages with in-store signage about not driving after consuming and waiting to feel the effects of edibles before taking more. Free harm-reduction resources are widely available through city programs and local nonprofits—most visible in Lower Manhattan and the Lower East Side—including naloxone trainings and drug safety education. While these services focus on opioids and stimulants rather than cannabis, the broader harm-reduction culture influences how retailers talk about responsible use, safe storage, and community health. Some dispensaries run or support record-sealing and employment clinics in partnership with reentry and legal-aid organizations, reflecting New York’s social and economic equity goals for the adult-use market. If Dagmar Cannabis spotlights community efforts on its channels, you’ll likely see those themes: safe consumption, local hiring, and participation in neighborhood cleanups or small-business networks.

Transit options if you’d rather not drive
Even though you asked about driving specifically, it’s useful to know why so many locals skip the car for a dispensary run. 10012 is one of the best-served transit zones in Manhattan. The Broadway–Lafayette station connects the B, D, F, and M lines; the Prince Street station serves the R and W; the Spring Street station on the 6 sits at Lafayette; the Houston Street station on the 1 is a short walk west of SoHo; and the A, C, and E lines stop at Canal and Spring on the west side. That concentration of subway lines means a dispensary

Recent Reviews

No reviews yet.

Opening Hours

All times are Pacific Standard Time (PST)

Sunday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Monday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Tuesday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Wednesday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Thursday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Friday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Saturday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM

Follow your dispensary!

Contact

Call: (212) 933 - 4457
0 bookmarked this place
Similar recreational retail dispensaries near Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO

You may also like

Silk Road NYC logo

Silk Road NYC

Recreational Retail

166-30 Jamaica Ave.

Jamaica, New York, 11432

Average Rating: 0.00 / 5 Stars

Total Reviews: 0 Reviews

Distance from Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO: 11.02 Miles

Just a Little Higher - Upper West Side logo

Just a Little Higher - Upper West Side

Recreational Retail

157 West 72nd Street

New York, New York, 10023

Average Rating: 0.00 / 5 Stars

Total Reviews: 0 Reviews

Distance from Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO: 3.87 Miles

Bay Street Greenery logo

Bay Street Greenery

Recreational Retail

150 Bay St

Jersey City, New Jersey, 07302

Average Rating: 0.00 / 5 Stars

Total Reviews: 0 Reviews

Distance from Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO: 2.01 Miles

Bliss and Lex logo

Bliss and Lex

Recreational Retail

128 East 86th Street

New York, New York, 10028

Average Rating: 0.00 / 5 Stars

Total Reviews: 0 Reviews

Distance from Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO: 4.46 Miles

The Apothecarium - Maplewood logo

The Apothecarium - Maplewood

Recreational Retail

1865 Springfield Ave

Maplewood, New Jersey, 07040

Average Rating: 0.00 / 5 Stars

Total Reviews: 0 Reviews

Distance from Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO: 14.02 Miles

Jungle Kingdom Flower logo

Jungle Kingdom Flower

Recreational Retail

515 Nostrand Ave

Brooklyn, New York, 11216

Average Rating: 0.00 / 5 Stars

Total Reviews: 0 Reviews

Distance from Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO: 4.16 Miles

OC Dispensary logo

OC Dispensary

Recreational Retail

769 Franklin Ave

Brooklyn, New York, 11238

Average Rating: 0.00 / 5 Stars

Total Reviews: 0 Reviews

Distance from Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO: 4.31 Miles

AYR Cannabis Dispensary - Eatontown (Med) logo

AYR Cannabis Dispensary - Eatontown (Med)

Medical Retail

59 Main St

Eatontown, New Jersey, 07724

Average Rating: 0.00 / 5 Stars

Total Reviews: 0 Reviews

Distance from Dagmar Cannabis - SOHO: 29.08 Miles