Potheads living in states where marijuana is legal can stop freaking out — the federal government won’t be cracking down on recreational use after all, a report says.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions sparked mass paranoia earlier this week when he firmly restated his opposition to “weed” and ordered a review of an Obama-era policy that allows individual states to implement their own laws on cannabis.

But the embattled politician has apparently assured some Republican senators, behind closed doors, that the Trump administration is in no way considering a drastic shift in enforcement, according to Politico.

“He told me he would have some respect for states’ right on these things,” Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) told the outlet. “So I’ll be very unhappy if the federal government decides to go into Colorado and Washington and all of these places. And that’s not [what] my interpretation of my conversation with him was. That this wasn’t his intention.”

Sen. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.) also claimed that White House officials were insisting that there would be no change coming to laws in states where marijuana has been legalized.

“Nothing at this point has changed,” he said.

Despite this, several bipartisan senators chose to play it safe on Thursday — sending a letter to Sessions, urging him to uphold the government’s existing policy on cannabis.

“We respectfully request that you uphold DOJ’s existing policy regarding states that have implemented strong and effective regulations for recreational use,” the senators wrote. “It is critical that states continue to implement these laws.”

The letter was spawned by Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) — both of whom hail from states where pot is legal.

In addition to Sessions, press secretary Sean Spicer also said this week that the Trump administration was considering “greater enforcement” of federal laws, which label marijuana as an illegal drug.

A total of eight states have legalized pot for recreational use in the last few years, as well as the District of Columbia.

Of the senators who signed the letter Thursday, Murkowski was reportedly the only Republican.

“Do they really respect states’ rights? Then you should respect all of them, not just pick and choose the ones that you want to support or not,” Senator Catherine Cortez Masto ( D-Nev.) told Politico.

“Many states have gone not only the path of Nevada of recreational marijuana but medical marijuana,” she said. “How can you pick or choose one or another?”

While the issue may seem centered solely around cannabis, the senators said it’s also one of state’s rights.

“We’re concerned about some of the language that we’re hearing,” Paul said. “And I think that conservatives who are for states’ rights ought to believe in states’ rights. I’m going to continue to advocate that the states should be left alone.”