HashFoxx is a recreational retail dispensary located in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
In the urban core of Oklahoma City, the 73106 ZIP Code pulls together some of the city’s most recognizable corridors—NW 23rd Street, Classen Boulevard, and the Plaza District—into a compact area that’s easy to reach from nearly anywhere in town. In the middle of that everyday flow sits HashFoxx, a locally owned, craft cannabis shop with a simple promise: quality, variety, and service without the fuss. The brand’s Weedmaps listings describe HashFoxx as a one‑stop cannabis destination, and that positioning shows up in two important ways that matter to Oklahoma medical cannabis patients. First, it’s a dispensary with a broad menu and a high satisfaction score. Second, it extends beyond retail with cultivation products and trimming accessories available for order pickup, the kind of practical inventory that attracts home growers and hobbyists who value convenience. Add a dedicated drive‑thru for medical patients, and the store fits the way people in 73106 actually live, drive, and shop.
If you’re coming from downtown or Midtown, the path to 73106 is direct. Classen Boulevard runs diagonally through the core and serves as a reliable north‑south backbone for quick trips. From the central business district, Classen northbound reaches the 23rd Street corridor in minutes. From Midtown, either Walker Avenue or Classen will take you straight into the neighborhood without the need for highway ramps. Drivers who prefer the freeway network often use I‑235, also known as the Broadway Extension, to hop in and out of the urban core. The N 23rd Street exit off I‑235 feeds west toward 73106, and because 23rd is a signed state route (US‑62), its traffic lights are timed well enough that through‑movement stays fairly efficient outside the rush. On the west and northwest edges, I‑44 circles the city and connects 73106 to the suburbs; taking the Pennsylvania Avenue or Western Avenue exits off I‑44 and heading south will put you on the grid that leads to NW 36th, 23rd, 16th, and the cross streets where most dispensaries, restaurants, and service businesses cluster.
Traffic in this part of town has a daily rhythm that makes planning straightforward. Mornings see a bump on I‑235 and the I‑44 interchanges as commuters move through the spine toward downtown and the medical campuses. Evenings are busiest between 4:00 and 6:30 p.m., especially along Classen Boulevard and NW 23rd Street, where turning traffic mixes with restaurant and retail stops. Outside of those windows, the neighborhood grid is forgiving. Classen’s diagonal geometry gives you multiple options to bypass an intersection you don’t like, and parallel routes like Western Avenue, Walker Avenue, and Shartel Avenue often move at a steady pace even when 23rd stacks up. If you’re navigating from the airport, I‑44 east to Pennsylvania Avenue south to NW 23rd is a simple, low‑stress route that keeps you away from the densest downtown interchanges, while drivers coming from Norman or Moore usually ride I‑35 north, join I‑235 into downtown, then peel off at 23rd to swing west into 73106. Those coming in from Edmond generally stay on the Broadway Extension and do the same. The takeaway for patients is that you don’t need to budget much extra time to reach a dispensary in 73106, and if traffic does flare up at one intersection, the grid gives you viable alternatives within a block or two.
HashFoxx’s drive‑thru matters in this context because it allows medical patients to move through the purchase process without adding parking or lobby time to their trip. Weedmaps calls out “HashFoxx OKC – Drive Thru” and notes that the lane is for medical patients only, which matches Oklahoma’s current legal framework. The state’s cannabis program remains medical‑only, so patients present their OMMA card and a valid ID, place an order, and complete the transaction at the window just as they would at the counter. Many locals in 73106 use Weedmaps to browse menus and lock in pickup orders ahead of time, then decide at the last moment whether to run inside or stay in the car. That small layer of flexibility makes a real difference if you’re timing a visit between errands on NW 23rd, grabbing lunch in the Plaza District on NW 16th, or routing around a school dismissal on Classen.
The other way HashFoxx mirrors local demand is by supporting the grow‑your‑own current that runs strong in Oklahoma City. Through Weedmaps, HashFoxx lists cannabis cultivation products for sale with in‑store pickup. The cultivation and trimming accessories pages reinforce the “one‑stop destination” idea and speak to a segment of the market that doesn’t just buy flower or pre‑rolls—they clip, cure, and care for plants at home and then come back for trimming tools when harvest time hits. For a neighborhood that blends historic houses with small apartments, that kind of practical retail turns the dispensary into a routine stop rather than a special outing. It’s not just the consumer side; it’s the tools and supplies that go with caring about the plant.
A quick word about the customer experience, because it factors into how locals choose among dispensaries in the corridor. HashFoxx’s Weedmaps presence positions it as a craft shop with big‑store variety and service, and the drive‑thru listing nearby shows a high rating—often in the 4.9 to 5.0 range—based on user reviews. In a city where dispensaries are numerous, scores like that signal predictable service, an ordering system that works, and staff who know how to guide patients without upselling them into products they don’t want. The menu mix changes, as you’d expect in a craft‑oriented shop, but the throughline is a selection that can accommodate a quick “in‑and‑out” purchase or a longer consultation.
The community around 73106 adds texture to this dispensary experience in ways that are practical and, in some cases, explicitly health‑focused. The neighborhood is home to the Plaza District, a walkable stretch along NW 16th that hosts “Live on the Plaza,” a monthly art‑and‑music night that fills the street with foot traffic. On NW 23rd, the Uptown corridor houses the Tower Theatre and a run of restaurants that support a steady evening crowd. To the northeast along Classen, the Asian District clusters around pho shops and markets that anchor the area’s weekend rhythms. For medical cannabis patients, that mix means a typical stop at a dispensary like HashFoxx can be folded into a normal day—errands on 23rd, a coffee on 16th, a grocery run on Western—and isn’t a drive across the metro.
Public health and social services also live nearby. The Homeless Alliance’s WestTown campus sits within the 73106 ZIP Code and serves as a hub for housing, health services, and day shelter support. That presence has helped concentrate outreach, medical, and counseling services in the urban core so that people who need multiple forms of support can access them within a few blocks. Although HashFoxx is a retail business and not a clinic, operating in a ZIP Code that includes social‑service infrastructure often influences store policies in subtle ways: clear ID checks, a predictable service flow, and consistent communication about what patients need to bring and what the limits are. From a patient’s perspective, this environment takes some of the friction out of health‑related errands—whether that’s filling a prescription at a pharmacy or picking up a cannabis order at a dispensary.
If you’re new to the Oklahoma medical program, locals keep the process simple. Patients bring their OMMA card and a valid, matching government ID every time they shop. Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority rules set possession limits for patients and caregivers, and dispensaries track sales to keep transactions within those legal limits. Because Oklahoma remains a medical‑only state, out‑of‑state visitors who qualify often apply for a temporary patient license through OMMA before they shop; the application is online, and the license window is short but renewable. Most dispensaries in the 73106 area, including HashFoxx, let patients order online for in‑store pickup or drive‑thru pickup, which is where Weedmaps comes into play. Browsing menus online lets patients compare prices, cannabinoid profiles, and availability in real time, reserve items before they sell out, and then time their pickup to their route across town. Payment remains cash‑forward in much of the market due to banking rules, though some shops offer PIN‑based debit at the counter; locals often assume cash and treat any card option as a convenient bonus.
It’s worth noting how the drive‑thru experience fits Oklahoma City’s car‑centric layout. In 73106, street parking on 23rd and 16th can be tight during peak dining hours or whenever the Plaza District hosts an event. The drive‑thru option at HashFoxx effectively removes that variable. A patient can enter from the nearest arterial, follow the posted drive‑thru lane, present documents, complete the purchase, and get back onto Classen or Western in minutes. For caregivers who pick up for someone else, the ability to minimize time away is not a small thing. For patients managing mobility, chronic pain, or time‑sensitive schedules, staying in the vehicle can turn a task that might otherwise be a barrier into routine healthcare.
If you’re looking at the area from the outside and wondering which routes actually feel easy, consider the way 73106 sits in the network. From Edmond, the Broadway Extension (US‑77/I‑235) south to the N 23rd Street exit offers the most consistent drive at most times of day. From Norman, I‑35 north splits near downtown; follow the signs to I‑235 and exit at N 23rd, then head west. From Yukon, Bethany, or Warr Acres, I‑44 east to the Pennsylvania Avenue exit, south to NW 23rd, and east into 73106 avoids the denser parts of downtown while keeping you on higher‑speed roads. From the airport, I‑44 east to Western Avenue south, then east on NW 23rd brings you into the grid with few surprises. All of these routes drop you within a few blocks of the standard cross‑streets where dispensaries like HashFoxx operate. If you’re already in the core, the surface streets may be quicker: Classen Boulevard for diagonal movement, Western Avenue for steady north‑south progression, and Shartel, Walker, or Dewey for parallel relief.
Inside the 73106 corridor, the feel of a dispensary visit is shaped by the neighborhood’s pace. Midday is the calmest time to shop, and if you’re using the drive‑thru, you can slide in between meetings or after lunch without worrying about parking. Evening pickups blend into the dinner rush along NW 23rd and the Plaza District; those windows are when pre‑ordering through Weedmaps saves time. Weekends are livelier, especially on second Fridays when the Plaza District’s street life expands and traffic on Classen and 16th Street ticks up. For many patients, the solution is to combine errands—swing past the dispensary, pick up groceries on Western, and head home along a route that avoids the busiest intersections.
HashFoxx’s place in the neighborhood is also about proximity to other cannabis companies. The 73106 and adjacent ZIP Codes have become a cluster for dispensaries and wellness retailers, and Weedmaps listings show several well‑known dispensaries operating nearby along with HashFoxx. Names that pop up on area pages include The Peak – 36th Street, The Green Day with a 24/7 drive‑thru, Lotus Garden Apothecary, and Oklahoma’s Finest Cannabis. For patients, that density isn’t about competition; it’s about choice and convenience. If a certain formulation is out of stock at one location, an online search shows alternatives within a mile or two. HashFoxx stands out in that mix with its drive‑thru, locally owned identity, and a product spread that includes cultivation gear as well as finished cannabis products, which helps the store serve both daily shoppers and growers who plan their visits around seasonal cycles.
Health initiatives in the area aren’t limited to medical cards and clinics. Oklahoma City’s core has spent the past decade building everyday wellness into public spaces—more shaded sidewalks, better crosswalks along 23rd, and civic programming that encourages residents to be out in their neighborhoods. Scissortail Park, just south of downtown, hosts open‑air yoga classes and wellness events that are a short drive from 73106; the Oklahoma River trails are accessible via Western Avenue or Walker and give cyclists and pedestrians a continuous path away from traffic. While these features aren’t specific to cannabis, they add to a local ecosystem in which medical patients can combine personal wellness routines with a quick stop at a dispensary like HashFoxx without turning the day into a series of long drives.
On the product side, patients can expect the usual Oklahoma categories—flower, pre‑rolls, vapes, concentrates, edibles, and topicals—plus the practical items in the cultivation and trimming aisle that HashFoxx advertises for pickup. Weedmaps brand pages and product listings sometimes highlight where products are available, and you’ll occasionally see HashFoxx appear alongside specific items. Inventory does change, so locals lean on real‑time menus to avoid guessing; it’s common practice to check the listing, reserve online, then complete the transaction in the drive‑thru. Because Oklahoma patients often keep a close eye on compliance, staff in these shops are ready to answer questions about THC totals, unit counts, and how state limits apply to a specific basket—another reason the drive‑thru can move quickly when you arrive with an order number and ID in hand.
For anyone new to the market, the etiquette is straightforward and patient‑centered. Bring your OMMA card and ID every time. Expect to have your documents checked before the sale proceeds, whether at the counter or at the drive‑thru window. Ask about product details without hesitation; staff are there to walk you through cannabinoid content, delivery methods, and what makes one SKU different from another. If you plan to shop regularly, keep in mind that many Oklahoma City dispensaries run rotating deals or patient appreciation discounts; while HashFoxx’s current promotions are best confirmed on their Weedmaps page, locals routinely make decisions based on what’s featured that week. Payment is most often cash, so having bills ready can shave a minute or two off the drive‑thru experience.
When you zoom out, HashFoxx’s approach makes sense for 73106. The core of Oklahoma City runs on a grid with a handful of diagonal arteries that keep cars moving. People who live and work in the area are accustomed to planning their day around short, efficient trips. A dispensary that pairs high‑rated service with a drive‑thru designed for medical patients fits that pattern. The cultivation and trimming accessories fill an everyday need that doesn’t require a separate trip to a specialty shop. And being in a ZIP Code that mixes art, dining, health services, and quick access to the interstate system means the store sits in a loop that many Oklahoma City residents travel weekly.
The last piece is the simplest. Patients want a dispensary that’s easy to reach, easy to use, and consistent in how it handles documents and orders. HashFoxx, as described on Weedmaps, is locally owned and built to deliver big on quality, variety, and service, with the added capability of a medical patient drive‑thru and a catalog that extends into cultivation. In 73106, where NW 23rd and Classen frame much of the day’s traffic, that combination turns a cannabis errand into a quick, predictable stop on routes that locals already know by heart. Whether you’re taking I‑235 to 23rd, sliding down Classen from Midtown, or cutting across from I‑44 via Western or Pennsylvania, the path is straightforward. The experience follows suit: verify, pick up, and get on with your day. In a city built around the car, that’s not just a convenience—it’s the difference between planning your afternoon around a single task and fitting it neatly into the rhythm of Oklahoma City.
| Sunday | 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM |
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| 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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