K'S Dispo - Roland - Roland, Oklahoma - JointCommerce
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K'S Dispo - Roland

Recreational Retail

Address: 707 South Roland Road Roland, Oklahoma 74954

Average Rating: 0.00 / 5 Stars

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K'S Dispo - Roland is a recreational retail dispensary located in Roland, Oklahoma.

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Description of K'S Dispo - Roland

K’S Dispo – Roland is a medical cannabis dispensary serving patients in Roland, Oklahoma, in ZIP Code 74954. It sits in a part of Sequoyah County that looks east toward the Fort Smith, Arkansas, metro area and west toward Muldrow and Sallisaw, anchoring a small but active corridor of Oklahoma medical dispensaries along US‑64 and the I‑40 spine. On Weedmaps, K’S Dispo – Roland is listed as “medical patients only” and holds a 5.0‑star average rating from a handful of reviews, which gives potential visitors an at‑a‑glance sense of how other patients have experienced the shop’s service and products. Because it is a medical dispensary in a state with an established medical marijuana framework, the rhythms of a visit here tend to follow the familiar Oklahoma model: arrive with a valid OMMA patient license and a government‑issued photo ID, check in, and consult with a budtender to select the right products for your needs.

Patients who live in Roland or commute across the state line from Fort Smith recognize how practical this location is for everyday errands. The town’s positioning just off the interstate and directly on US‑64 means you can approach the dispensary through two complementary travel patterns. If you prefer the highway, I‑40 delivers you to local exits that connect straight to Roland. If you prefer surface streets, US‑64 runs parallel to the interstate and threads through Roland’s small business strip, linking the community with Muldrow to the west and the Oklahoma–Arkansas state line to the east. That two‑route redundancy is useful for medical cannabis patients who want to swing by during a lunch break, stop in after work, or plan a quick weekend errand without venturing far from the corridors they already drive.

From Fort Smith, there are two reliable approaches, and locals choose based on time of day. When traffic is free‑flowing, many drivers take Midland Boulevard toward the state line and continue west on US‑64 through Arkoma and Moffett before arriving in Roland. That route keeps you on the ground‑level grid, with predictable lights and local speeds that rarely stall. At peak periods, others hop up to I‑540/US‑71 to connect with I‑40 and head west to Oklahoma, then drop down onto US‑64 toward Roland via the Roland/Muldrow exits. That interstate route is usually a few minutes faster when Fort Smith’s in‑town signals are backed up, and it avoids the surface‑street compression near the river and the state line. For patients coming from Muldrow, it’s even easier: remain on US‑64, heading east for a quick drive into Roland. From Van Buren and Alma, patients generally run I‑40 west, cross into Oklahoma, and exit toward Roland onto US‑64; the same logic applies in reverse if you are coming from Sallisaw, where either I‑40 east or US‑64 east will carry you directly into town without any tricky interchanges.

Traffic volumes in and around Roland reflect its role as a small community perched on a major interstate. US‑64 behaves like a main street during daylight hours, with steady but manageable flow and short waits at signals. School start and release windows can add a few extra minutes, and weekday mornings tend to tilt toward eastbound movement as commuters head to Fort Smith. Afternoons and early evenings show the opposite trend as those same drivers return west. I‑40 presents the predictable long‑haul truck pattern common to coast‑to‑coast freight, which means traffic there is heavier but moves steadily unless there is construction or a weather incident. For the dispensary‑bound driver who values predictability, US‑64 is the straightforward option; for the driver who wants to shave a few minutes when regional traffic opens up, the interstate cut‑through often pays off. Either way, navigation is simple and signage clear, and you are not weaving through complicated downtown grids or unfamiliar neighborhood streets to reach a cannabis dispensary in Roland.

Parking in this part of Sequoyah County is rarely a pinch point. Businesses along US‑64 generally offer surface‑lot parking right out front or just off the main roadway. Patients who plan their trip during mid‑morning or mid‑afternoon often find the quietest storefronts and the quickest in‑and‑out experience. If you are traveling at the same time as the school rush or weekend errand blocks, a few extra minutes helps, but the area does not experience the bottlenecks that plague larger city cores, and it is common to be able to park, walk in, and check in within a few minutes.

Because K’S Dispo – Roland serves “medical patients only,” it operates within the parameters set by the Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority (OMMA). For locals, that means the shopping routine is consistent: you bring your valid OMMA patient license, present a government‑issued ID that matches your card, and expect a standard check‑in process before you browse. Most medical dispensaries in Oklahoma verify your active status and then walk you through the menu with a budtender who can answer practical questions about strains, batches, formats, and potency. Many patients in Roland and neighboring towns lean on Weedmaps to preview menus, read recent reviews, and check whether a store is currently open before they get in the car. Weedmaps’ Roland page lists K’S Dispo – Roland among local dispensaries and calls out that it’s for medical patients, and the shop’s 5.0‑star average rating from five reviews provides a small but useful snapshot of patient sentiment. Because hours can vary by day and holiday, patients often confirm open status in the app or by phone right before they head over.

The broader medical cannabis culture in this pocket of eastern Oklahoma is influenced by the cross‑border commute and the region’s small‑town pace. Many residents work in Fort Smith or along the I‑40 corridor, so a visit to a Roland dispensary tends to be part of a route they already drive. Patients often time their shopping between other essential stops—a quick grocery run in Muldrow or a pharmacy pickup in Sallisaw—and they look for stores with steady pricing on flower and straightforward options for edibles and concentrates. In smaller communities like Roland, familiarity matters. Patients get to know the budtenders, ask for specific cultivars when they reappear, and keep notes on which brands or batches hit the target for sleep, pain, or daytime focus. Because Oklahoma ties purchasing to active patient status, locals watch their card expiration date and have a renewal reminder in their phone, often timing it well ahead of expiration to avoid any gap that could interrupt access.

K’S Dispo – Roland’s presence on Weedmaps pages that highlight dispensaries around Roland—and in nearby city searches such as Fort Smith—underscores how often patients hop across jurisdictional lines for daily life. That makes it important to repeat one of the most practical rules of medical cannabis in this border region: do not take cannabis across state lines, even if you have a medical card at home and you are driving only a few miles. Interstate transport remains illegal, and Arkansas and Oklahoma operate separate programs. If you’re an Oklahoma medical patient visiting K’S Dispo – Roland and you live or work on the Arkansas side, the safest plan is to purchase what you need for use at home in Oklahoma and keep your products there. When you are out running errands and planning a dispensary visit, make that the final stop before you head back, and store your purchase in a closed container in the vehicle’s trunk to keep things compliant and out of reach while driving.

On the subject of compliance and costs, Oklahoma applies a state medical marijuana excise tax to purchases in addition to standard sales taxes. Patients in Roland should expect to see the statewide medical marijuana tax plus local and state sales tax on their receipt. Payment norms in small‑town Oklahoma are practical: many dispensaries prioritize cash, sometimes with an ATM on site, while some accept debit through cashless solutions. Because policies vary and can change, locals check the dispensary’s Weedmaps listing or call ahead to ask about payment options before they arrive. Patients who budget around specials sometimes browse menus early in the week, as many Oklahoma dispensaries build deals into specific weekdays, though the exact structure varies by store. Loyalty programs are common in the state, but they are not universal, so patients typically ask at the counter rather than assuming points or cashback apply.

Driving conditions into Roland are generally steady across seasons, though eastern Oklahoma weather can change quickly. Spring and early summer bring thunderstorms that move along the Arkansas River valley and can briefly slow I‑40 and US‑64 with heavy rain. A mid‑day storm will stack up interstate traffic more than the in‑town grid, so during active weather some patients pick US‑64 for its shorter, more predictable travel segment. Winter can bring a thin glaze of ice on bridges and elevated ramps. Those are short‑lived events, and road crews in both Oklahoma and Arkansas respond quickly on the primary corridors, but it is still smart to leave a little extra time and avoid abrupt lane changes when roads are slick. The local rhythm is to travel with patience on days like that and to plan dispensary visits during daylight when visibility is better.

One of the community features that shapes health in Roland is access to county and tribal health resources across a relatively compact geography. Sequoyah County’s health department in Sallisaw is a hub for vaccinations, wellness screenings, and tobacco cessation resources, which matters in a region where many families still rely on a mix of county and tribal clinics. Public health teams regularly organize seasonal vaccination events and health fairs, and area providers promote prevention‑focused programming that includes mental health referrals and chronic disease education. On the Oklahoma tribal side, Native families who identify with the Cherokee Nation or other tribes in the region often loop in tribal clinics for primary care and pharmacy coordination. On the Arkansas side, Fort Smith’s hospital systems, urgent care centers, and nonprofit health organizations expand the menu of care options within a 15‑ to 20‑minute drive. For medical cannabis patients, the presence of these services means it is possible to align clinic visits, pharmacy errands, and a dispensary stop on the same day without a long commute.

Harm reduction is another thread running through the local health landscape. Community partners in eastern Oklahoma and western Arkansas have steadily increased access to education around substance use, naloxone distribution, and peer‑based recovery resources. In practice, that looks like county health educators showing up at community events with information tables, regional mental health providers offering therapy and case management, and local coalitions encouraging safe storage practices for all medications at home. Patients who use cannabis medically are part of those conversations too, particularly around responsible storage, avoiding impaired driving, and coordinating cannabis use with other medications. A routine dispensary interaction in Roland often includes a reminder to start low and go slow with any new edible or concentrate and to keep products in child‑resistant packaging away from minors and pets.

Because Roland stands at the edge of a larger metro, its cannabis shopping patterns look different from the state’s more isolated rural towns. You can move efficiently between errands, and you are rarely more than ten to fifteen minutes from what you need. That convenience affects how locals buy medical cannabis. They may stop by for a small purchase more often rather than making a single large purchase every few weeks. They browse online menus in the morning while they drink coffee, compare two dispensaries’ prices on a strain or gummy they know works for them, then decide which stop to make on the way home. They ask budtenders specific, practical questions about batches—how a cultivar is leaning this harvest, which gummy line uses pectin instead of gelatin, whether the current run of cartridges leans toward botanical or cannabis‑derived terpenes—and they keep a mental map of stores where they’ve had smooth experiences. In a small town, that memory stretches a long way. If a dispensary staffer takes time to walk through a patient’s needs and suggests thoughtful alternatives when an item is out of stock, that patient will tell friends and come back.

For patients new to the Oklahoma program, a first visit to a Roland dispensary usually begins with ID checks, then a quick conversation about what you want your cannabis to do for you. Daytime needs lean toward lighter, clearer options with less sedative weight. Evenings push patients toward products that emphasize rest and muscle relaxation. For pain management, many locals combine a flower or vape format with a low‑dose edible for longer‑lasting effect, and they ask about topical balms for joint‑specific relief. If you have a physician’s note that outlines general goals or cautions, bring it, and always give your budtender a sense of what you’ve used before. In Oklahoma, third‑party testing is a key part of the supply chain, so patients in Roland are used to asking about COAs and batch test summaries to understand potency and the presence of major cannabinoids and terpenes. Budtenders can help interpret those numbers, but the rule of thumb stays simple: choose products whose effects you can predict and that fit the time of day you plan to use them.

It is also worth acknowledging how the border context affects expectations around pricing and selection. Arkansas dispensaries operate under a different regulatory and economic framework than Oklahoma’s medical market. Oklahoma patients are accustomed to wider menus and more frequent price movement, especially on flower. In ZIP Code 74954, that flexibility is part of why many patients shop locally. They can match a purchase to a budget more easily, and when the product mix shifts with a harvest cycle, they can pivot to something equivalent without driving far. That said, many patients set a budget using totals that include tax and avoid surprise add‑ons by confirming out‑the‑door prices before they commit at the counter.

Community life in Roland also shapes how and when patients visit dispensaries. This is a high‑school‑game‑on‑Friday kind of town, with evenings and weekends devoted to family, faith, and local events. During peak community blocks, dispensary visits bunch up before and after gatherings, which is why you will see very quiet windows mid‑morning on weekdays. If you value a longer conversation with a budtender to dial in a new regimen, those quieter windows are when locals recommend stopping by. If you know exactly what you want and you are squeezing in a stop on the way home from work, the late‑afternoon pattern on US‑64 is predictable, and parking remains straightforward even when traffic is modestly heavier.

Patients who live along the river valley also keep an eye on construction. Highway crews occasionally rotate work zones along I‑40 and on bridges near the state line. When that happens, surface streets can be the less stressful choice. All the same, signage tends to be good, and you are dealing with short distances. If you run a quick check of navigation before you leave and see the interstate is red, US‑64 is your fallback. If both are clear, choose the route you know best and expect the trip to feel easy.

As with any medical purchase, there are a few final reminders that locals in Roland repeat to each other. Always bring your OMMA card and ID. Do not plan to share cannabis with anyone who is not a patient, and do not transport it across state lines. Store your purchase in a closed container in the trunk, and keep it there until you are home. If you are trying a new product type or a higher potency, do that at a time when you don’t have to drive later, and keep notes so you can dial it in. And if you are coordinating your cannabis regimen with other medications or a new diagnosis, loop in your medical provider, whether that is a county clinic, a tribal clinic, or a primary care office in Fort Smith, so they can help w

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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

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Contact

Call: (918) 503 - 6192
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