CommCan - Rehoboth is a recreational retail dispensary located in Rehoboth, Massachusetts.
CommCan - Rehoboth brings a locally owned, Massachusetts-first approach to adult-use cannabis to Rehoboth’s quiet corner of Bristol County. Set in ZIP Code 02769, this dispensary serves a mix of long‑time Rehoboth residents, nearby Seekonk and Attleboro shoppers, and drivers moving between Providence and Taunton along the Route 44 corridor. The location benefits from practical road access, abundant surface parking typical of the area’s commercial properties, and a customer base that appreciates straightforward service, clearly labeled products, and the reassurance that comes with buying from a licensed Massachusetts dispensary.
The retail footprint for cannabis in Rehoboth stands out because of how the town is laid out. Rehoboth has miles of two‑lane country roads, protected farmland, and low‑density residential pockets, with most retail clustered on or near Winthrop Street, better known as Route 44. That corridor connects East Providence and Seekonk to Taunton, Bridgewater, and Plymouth, so a Rehoboth dispensary like CommCan - Rehoboth sits in a practical position for both locals and regional drivers who want a stop that’s easy in, easy out. Compared with urban storefronts or downtown mill conversions elsewhere in Massachusetts, a Rehoboth dispensary is more likely to have a purpose‑built parking lot, clearly marked entry points, and room for security and traffic management to operate without creating congestion for neighbors.
Getting to CommCan - Rehoboth is straightforward no matter which direction you’re coming from. Drivers coming out of Providence or East Providence typically follow I‑195 east and exit onto US‑44 east at Taunton Avenue, then continue straight across the state line into Seekonk where Taunton Avenue becomes Winthrop Street. That run across Seekonk has several sets of signalized intersections and a dense cluster of big‑box stores, gas stations, and drive‑thru lanes near MA‑152. During weekday rush hours and on weekend afternoons the lights at that 44/152 area will slow you down, but once you pass the bulk of Seekonk’s shopping centers, traffic opens up as you roll into Rehoboth. From there the roadway is mostly two lanes with set speed limits and intermittent turn lanes; it’s a simple east‑west drive with minimal merges and good sight lines.
If you’re headed in from Taunton or Bridgewater, Route 44 west presents the mirror image. You’ll cross Taunton’s commercial strip and a handful of larger intersections, then the scenery thins as you enter Rehoboth. Visibility is good in this direction as well, but weekday late afternoons bring some slowdowns at lights near school zones and at points where farm stands and seasonal events draw turn‑in traffic. Drivers from Attleboro and North Attleboro have two efficient options: take I‑95 south to I‑295 south and then connect to US‑44 east in Seekonk, or come down MA‑118, which intersects Route 44 in Rehoboth. Route 118 is a calmer, tree‑lined run with typical school‑hour congestion and the occasional queue from local roadwork or utility crews. From Swansea and Somerset, most people cut across on I‑195 and swing north via local connectors to Route 44, or they approach through Seekonk’s local grid before picking up Winthrop Street.
Traffic around the dispensary is predictable if you know the rhythms of Route 44. Morning commute toward Providence and evening commute toward Taunton produce the heaviest directional flow, magnified on rainy days when brake lights stack up at the Seekonk signals. Lunchtime hours are steady but manageable because much of the corridor supports quick‑turn retail, and there’s enough driveway access and center turning lanes to keep backups from lingering. On Fridays in late spring and summer, you’ll see extra volume as drivers head east on Route 44 toward I‑495 and the Route 44 expressway segment that leads out toward Plymouth and the South Shore. That extra motion doesn’t trap you in Rehoboth, but it can add a few minutes to weekend pickups if you time your visit to overlap with outbound travel. Saturdays see typical suburban ebbs and flows, with the most visible slowdowns happening closer to Seekonk’s retail clusters. Sundays are calmer until late afternoon when shoppers return from errands and day trips. In fall, when agritourism picks up and roadside farms host harvest events, vehicles turning in and out of lots on the Rehoboth side of 44 occasionally create short rolling queues. Local police presence is frequent enough to keep speeds in check, particularly around crosswalks and key intersections.
Parking is usually straightforward. Properties along this stretch of Winthrop Street generally rely on surface lots with clearly striped spaces, handicap‑accessible stalls nearest the entrance, and defined entry and exit lanes. Because CommCan - Rehoboth operates under detailed security and traffic plans required by the Cannabis Control Commission (CCC) and the Host Community Agreement with the Town of Rehoboth, the flow of cars in and out is controlled and monitored. If the store anticipates a surge for a product launch or holiday, staff can meter entry, guide overflow to marked areas, and keep nearby roads clear. That predictable traffic pattern is one reason many area residents consider Rehoboth an easy place to shop for cannabis compared with dense downtowns.
Locals in 02769 and the surrounding towns typically buy legal cannabis in a way that emphasizes speed, inventory transparency, and compliance. The path often starts online: people check the CommCan - Rehoboth live menu on the dispensary’s website or on popular marketplace aggregators to see what flower strains, pre‑rolls, edibles, vapes, tinctures, and topicals are in stock. Prices, potency ranges, and terpene highlights are visible before anyone gets in the car, and the menu usually flags limits or product caps relevant for adult‑use purchases. Most shoppers place a pre‑order for express pickup, selecting a window that matches their commute or errands on Route 44. Pre‑ordering cuts down on time spent inside and helps make sure that a coveted eighth or a particular gummy flavor is set aside under your name.
At the door, the experience is the same every time because CCC rules standardize it. You present a valid government‑issued photo ID that shows you are 21 or older. Out‑of‑state licenses and passports are accepted for adult‑use customers; medical cards are only relevant if you’re in a licensed medical dispensary or dual‑use facility, which determines whether you access medical‑only inventory and tax exemptions. CommCan - Rehoboth operates as an adult‑use dispensary, so you should expect to pay Massachusetts cannabis taxes: a 10.75 percent state excise tax on adult‑use cannabis, the 6.25 percent state sales tax, and up to a 3 percent local option tax set by the town. Many buyers who plan a larger basket simply account for roughly twenty percent combined taxes when setting their budget, although you’ll see the exact tax calculation at checkout.
Once inside, you either head straight to the express pickup counter to retrieve your pre‑order or spend a few minutes with a budtender to explore what’s new. Massachusetts dispensaries cannot make medical claims, but staff can walk you through product types, potency ranges, serving sizes, and label reading so you understand what you’re buying. Edibles in Massachusetts are capped at 5 milligrams of THC per serving and 100 milligrams per package for adult‑use products, which keeps shopping decisions focused on taste, onset timing, and brand preference. Purchase limits for adult‑use buyers are standardized statewide. You can buy up to one ounce of cannabis flower per visit, or an equivalent amount in other forms such as up to five grams of concentrate, with dispensary point‑of‑sale systems tracking your total to keep you inside the legal limit. Payment is typically cash or PIN debit due to ongoing federal banking constraints, and most dispensaries have an ATM on site as a fallback. Credit cards generally are not accepted. Some shops offer ACH or app‑based payments; if you prefer those, check the CommCan - Rehoboth site before you go.
Because Rehoboth is a driving town with limited bus service, locals plan their pickups around the day’s movements. A tradesperson with a job across Taunton might swing in after crossing into Rehoboth on Route 44 west at the end of the day. A commuter from Providence who uses I‑195 east will often schedule a pre‑order for a late afternoon slot to avoid the heaviest outbound traffic, choosing to stop after the Seekonk signals have been cleared. Weekend buyers fold a dispensary stop into grocery runs and hardware store errands along Winthrop Street, taking advantage of curb‑to‑counter speed when the parking lot is under half full. For many, loyalty points factor in; after a handful of visits, points stack up toward discounts that offset taxes on a future purchase.
CommCan - Rehoboth’s role in the community includes more than just retail. Under Massachusetts law, every adult‑use operator signs a Host Community Agreement that outlines community impact fees and commitments such as traffic management, site security, and support for local priorities. Those fees go to the Town, which can use them to bolster public health, education, and infrastructure items tied to the presence of a cannabis business. Rehoboth’s own public health landscape provides a backdrop to that collaboration. The Town of Rehoboth Board of Health, the Council on Aging, and regional partners within the Greater Attleboro Taunton area regularly organize clinics for flu shots and blood pressure screenings, distribute information on safe storage of medications and household chemicals, and host wellness classes on the Francis Farm community campus. Francis Farm, purchased by the Town and reimagined as a civic hub, now hosts senior programming, fitness activities, and community events, which gives residents a central place to engage with health resources. It’s common to see licensed dispensaries in Massachusetts align with that ethos by sharing the state’s responsible use materials, providing child‑resistant packaging, and steering customers toward safe‑use practices that the Massachusetts Department of Public Health promotes.
Substance use prevention and education are also visible in the region, with coalitions and school‑district messaging focused on youth prevention. Dighton‑Rehoboth Regional School District traffic around drop‑off and pickup times influences Route 44 and some feeder roads, and the school community participates in regional health campaigns that emphasize safe decision‑making. As with all Massachusetts dispensaries, CommCan - Rehoboth enforces a strict 21+ policy at the door and trains staff to spot underage attempts to purchase. The store’s security and camera systems meet stringent CCC requirements; while customers may not notice all the technical layers, they see the result in a controlled, calm retail environment that moves people efficiently without sacrificing compliance.
Driving to and from the dispensary carries its own set of common‑sense considerations that locals treat as unspoken rules. Open container laws apply to cannabis; keep your purchase sealed and stored away from the driver, such as in the trunk. Do not consume in the car or on public property. Driving under the influence of cannabis is illegal in Massachusetts, and enforcement is real on the Route 44 corridor. If you live over the Rhode Island line or are visiting from out of state, don’t take cannabis across state lines. Home possession rules in Massachusetts allow up to one ounce on your person and up to ten ounces in your private residence, but transportation across the border is prohibited by federal law. These basics are usually reinforced by printed placards at the point of sale, and most dispensaries will provide educational handouts or QR codes to state resources that detail safe use and storage.
The broader character of Rehoboth shapes the dispensary experience. The town is one of the state’s oldest rural communities, lined with stone walls and working farms that open their gates for seasonal u‑pick and farm stand sales. The Blanding Public Library at Goff Memorial Hall doubles as a cultural and community center, hosting programming that ranges from local history to wellness talks. The Carpenter Museum highlights the area’s agricultural legacy. Outdoor spots like Anawan Rock give locals a place to stretch their legs, and nearby golf and event venues add a steady flow of visitors from adjacent towns. For a cannabis store, that means a steady but manageable customer base and an emphasis on respectful, low‑impact operations. The people moving through the door tend to arrive by car, know what they want because they’ve already checked the menu, and appreciate being in and out in under fifteen minutes.
Product selection at CommCan - Rehoboth reflects what Massachusetts adult‑use shoppers have come to expect. Flower is sold in grams, eighths, quarters, and larger sizes subject to store policy and availability, with potency clearly labeled and batches tested by independent state‑licensed labs. Pre‑rolls range from single half‑gram smokes to multi‑packs, including infused options where permitted. Edibles stick to the state’s serving size rules and come in gummies, chews, chocolates, beverages, and mints. Vape carts are typically 0.5g or 1g units, with botanical and cannabis‑derived terpene profiles labeled so customers can decide between fruit‑forward blends or strain‑specific options. Tinctures and topicals round out the menu for people who prefer alternatives to inhalation. Because CommCan is a Massachusetts brand with cultivation and manufacturing roots in the state, you’ll often see house‑branded SKUs alongside third‑party products, giving shoppers a mix of familiar names and local craft. Budtenders focus on helping customers match goals to formats—daytime microdoses for light, functional effects versus evening products intended for unwinding—without overpromising or venturing into medical advice.
The financial side of shopping is straightforward. Price tags on menu pages generally display pre‑tax numbers for adult‑use products, with tax calculated at checkout. Daily deals, bundle pricing, and loyalty points help stretch budgets, especially for people who plan purchases around paydays or who stock up on non‑perishable items like tinctures and topicals. Because Route 44 puts CommCan - Rehoboth in the orbit of several other dispensaries in neighboring towns, savvy shoppers compare menus across stores for specific strains or categories, then pick the location that matches their route and timing. That regional competition tends to keep prices in line with the market and encourages dispensaries to streamline pickup so no one spends unnecessary time waiting.
Accessibility is part of the conversation in Rehoboth. Many customers prefer minimal walking, clear directional signage, and automatic doors. A single‑story building with at‑grade entrances and ADA parking near the front minimizes barriers for people with mobility challenges. Inside, well‑lit displays and readable label fonts matter, especially for older customers and those new to cannabis who want to scan labels for potency, ingredients, and serving guidance. Disposable exit bags have largely given way to reusable child‑resistant bags that customers bring back, which reduces waste and keeps departures quick. If you’re sensitive to crowds, weekday mornings and mid‑afternoons tend to be the calmest times to shop, with early evenings the most active given commuter patterns.
Seasonality influences the flow around CommCan - Rehoboth. In winter, snow events trigger rolling plow operations along Route 44; the roadway is a priority for early treatment and clearing due to its role as a regional connector, but parking lot conditions can lag behind the state highway. After storms, it’s wise to check the dispensary’s social pages or website in case the store adjusts hours to give plows time to work or to manage staff safety. In spring, pothole repair and utility work can create short single‑lane segments with flaggers on approach roads like Route 118; these pauses are brief but worth factoring into a tightly timed pickup. Summer construction on the Seekonk side has, in some years, lengthened waits at the 44/152 signals, which is another reason pre‑ordering helps. In autumn, agritourism and school events draw more vehicles onto the network of local roads feeding Route 44; everyone gets where they’re going, but patience pays.
Community health touches cannabis retail in less obvious ways too. The Town’s recycling and hazardous waste programs guide safe disposal of vape batteries and empty packaging, and residents have options to get rid of household sharps and medications through police‑department drop‑offs in neighboring communities. While cannabis products don’t go into those programs, the existence of a robust disposal culture keeps the idea of safe handling top of mind. For parents and caregivers, local outreach emphasizes locking up any intoxicating substances at home. Dispensary packaging is designed to meet those needs, and CommCan - Rehoboth staff can point you toward lockable pouches or stash boxes if you want an extra layer of security.
For visitors planning a stop as part of a longer route through Southeastern Massachusetts, the area around the dispensary is practical. Coffee, drive‑thru sandwiches, and fuel lines are close at hand along Winthrop Street, so you can stack errands efficiently. If you’re staying in a Seekonk or Attleboro hotel, you’ll find that the straight shot on Route 44 is easiest in mid‑morning or after the dinner hour when the retail lights are less busy. If you’re coming from Providence and want to cut down on red lights, choose a time outside the big‑box shopping rush and keep to the right lane through the 44/152 intersections so you can access turn‑ins without last‑second merges.
The legal guardrails in Massachusetts keep everything consistent no matter which dispensary you choose. You must be 21 or older to buy adult‑use cannabis. You cannot consume in public or in your car. Keep purchases sealed until you arrive at a private residence, and store products away from children and pets. If a product feels unfamiliar, start low and go slow rather than trying to match the tolerance of a friend, and give edibles enough time—often a couple of hours—before deciding whether to take another serving. These aren’t just slogans; they reflect the state’s emphasis on responsible consumption and the lived experience of budtenders who see new and returning customers every day. CommCan - Rehoboth’s staff are trained to help you interpret labels and serving guidelines without straying into medical territory.
When you look across the cannabis landscape near Rehoboth, what sets CommCan - Rehoboth apart is the combination of a Massachusetts‑owned brand and the practical advantages of its Route 44 location. The road network is simple and forgiving, with I‑195, I‑95, and I‑295 all feeding into 44 or 118 without confusing interchanges. The traffic picture is manageable if you avoid the obvious pinch points near Seekonk’s shopping hours. The store operates within a community that takes health and wellness seriously, from the Francis Farm campus to Board of Health clinics and regional prevention coalitions, and it contributes through required agreements and day‑to‑day practices that keep the neighborhood orderly and safe. For people searching for dispensaries in or near ZIP Code 02769, the experience of shopping at CommCan - Rehoboth lines up with the expectations that have come to define mature Massachusetts cannabis retail: transparent menus, controlled access, fast transactions, and a community‑minded presence.
As cannabis continues to normalize in Southeastern Massachusetts, the buying habits of locals will keep favoring dispensaries that make the trip easy. In Rehoboth, that means clearly marked driveways off Route 44, real‑time inventory, and pickup counters that move. It means price points that reflect a competitive regional market and a staff that treats every conversation as a chance to make someone’s first, fifth, or fiftieth purchase as seamless as possible. CommCan - Rehoboth fits that mold. If your map lines you up for a pass through 02769, plan your route with the few traffic notes in mind, place your order ahead, bring your ID and a debit card or cash, and you’ll be back on the road in minutes.
| 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 |
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