Arizona Tribe Revamps Reservation Alcohol Rules for Revenue
Published Date: 2/18/2026
Notice
Summary
The Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community updated their rules about selling, drinking, and owning alcohol on their reservation. Starting February 18, 2026, these new rules replace the old ones from 2016, giving the community more control and helping raise money to support local services. This change affects everyone living in or visiting the reservation who deals with alcohol.
Analyzed Economic Effects
7 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 5 costs, 1 mixed.
License Fees, Renewal Terms, Penalties
If you want to sell alcohol on the reservation, licenses are annual and have upfront fees (examples: original casino license $2,500, original restaurant $2,000, original retail $2,000). Renewals carry lower fees (example: retail renewal $1,000), a $500 late renewal penalty applies, and a license not renewed within 60 days is deemed terminated.
Applicant Eligibility and Background Checks
To get a license you must be a U.S. citizen and submit fingerprints for state and federal criminal history checks; people convicted of a felony within five years before application are not eligible. The office may require full financial disclosure from controlling persons and will check criminal history pursuant to Arizona law and federal procedures.
Retail Liquor Size and Drive‑Thru Limits
Off-sale retailers may sell packaged liquor only if the liquor store portion is at least 10,000 square feet or if the sale is part of a grocery, convenience, drug store, or big-box retailer, and retail drive-thru windows for alcohol sales are prohibited. Internet 'drive up and pick up' services are not considered a prohibited drive-thru.
Special and Private Event Alcohol Rules
Businesses and organizations must follow special rules to serve alcohol at events: special event license applications must be made at least 45 days before the event, a special event license may run no more than ten consecutive days per license, unlicensed premises may hold up to 12 special events per year, and commercial lessees may host one private event per calendar year if they notify the office at least 30 days ahead. Hosts may need a special use permit and must pay any additional police, fire, or staffing costs required.
Enforcement, Records, Audits, and Revocation Rules
The office may inspect licensed premises, require audits (using GAAP), demand invoices and records retained for at least two years, and may assess surcharges on renewals to cover auditor and enforcement costs. Licenses can be suspended or revoked for many causes including repeated violence, felony convictions, failure to keep records, or being delinquent more than 90 days in paying Community taxes.
New Reservation Alcohol Rules Effective
The Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community adopted a new Alcoholic Beverage Control Ordinance that replaces the 2016 ordinance and becomes effective February 18, 2026. This change gives the Community more control over alcohol sale, possession, and distribution and is intended to raise revenue to support Community government services.
Where You May Possess or Drink Alcohol
You may possess and drink alcoholic beverages on the reservation only in private residences and licensed premises; alcohol may be transported to and from those places in unbroken containers. Certain uses such as wine for religious practices or for cooking are explicitly allowed.
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