A plain-English breakdown of how “total THC” testing threatens CBD products, families, minors, travelers, and legitimate hemp operators in Missouri and nationwide.
There is a lot of confusion right now about the proposed change to the federal definition of hemp. Many people are saying, “This won’t affect CBD.” That is not true. The proposed language would replace today’s delta-9-only test with a strict total THC test. That single shift puts CBD flower, full-spectrum oils, minor-cannabinoid formulas, and even many therapeutic products used by families and children at risk.
What the Change Actually Does
- Current law (2018 Farm Bill): Hemp is legal if it contains ≤ 0.3% delta-9 THC on a dry-weight basis.
- Proposed change: Hemp would instead be measured by ≤ 0.3% total THC (delta-9 + THCA + other THC isomers).
- Additional concern: Draft language also references “quantifiable THC,” “intoxicating cannabinoids,” or cannabinoids not “naturally occurring,” which could capture legitimate CBD products.
Under this new rule, many products that have NEVER caused intoxication would fail compliance.
Why This Absolutely Affects CBD
CBD products are made from the same plant parts that naturally contain trace amounts of THC and THCA. Even tiny traces counted together under a total THC standard could push them above the legal threshold.
- CBD flower: Typically low delta-9 but high THCA. Under total THC, almost all CBD flower fails.
- Full-spectrum CBD oils: Usually contain small amounts of delta-9 + THCA + minor cannabinoids. Together, they may exceed “total THC.”
- Whole-plant and minor-cannabinoid products: Trace levels of multiple cannabinoids could disqualify them.
- Even tinctures for kids: Pediatric CBD formulas commonly contain trace THCA, meaning they may no longer qualify as “hemp.”
This change does NOT only affect “gas station weed.” It affects legitimate CBD operators, health companies, family-run businesses, Missouri farmers, and trusted wellness brands used by real patients.
How This Affects Kids Who Use CBD
Many families rely on CBD to help manage conditions like seizures, autism-related symptoms, anxiety, sleep, chronic pain, and more. Under the proposed law, their products could be reclassified as marijuana unless they meet the strict total THC threshold.
What does this mean for minors?
- Their CBD may no longer be available over the counter.
- Parents may need to get their child a medical marijuana card to legally access the same product they use today.
- The process can take days — which is a crisis for families who need immediate access during medical episodes.
- Not every state allows minors to be cardholders or has pediatric programs.
This creates new barriers, delays, and risks for families who have relied on safe, compliant hemp-derived CBD for years.
For Missouri-specific context, see our Rules for Patients & Caregivers and our general FAQ.
How This Affects Travelers
Travelers rely heavily on hemp-derived CBD because:
- It is legal in all 50 states under federal law.
- Minors can legally possess it.
- Patients crossing state lines don’t risk federal charges.
- Many medical patients cannot fly with cannabis even if they have a card.
If CBD is reclassified based on total THC testing:
- A legal product in Missouri could instantly become illegal in the next state.
- Minors traveling for medical procedures could lose their access.
- Families traveling for emergencies could be forced to choose between breaking a law or going without medicine.
- Pediatric patients (under 21) cannot legally “gift” or receive cannabis in most states, meaning hemp has been their only safe option.
This isn’t a loophole. These are real families with real needs.
Quick Comparison
| Feature | Current Law | Proposed Change |
|---|---|---|
| THC Metric | ≤ 0.3% delta-9 THC only | ≤ 0.3% total THC (delta-9 + THCA + isomers) |
| CBD Flower | Usually compliant | Fails due to natural THCA |
| Full-Spectrum Oils | Trace delta-9 usually OK | Combined THC forms exceed limit |
| Access for Kids | OTC CBD is legal for minors | Could require medical cards |
| Travel Across States | Safe federally | Product could become illegal by state |
| Impact on Legit CBD Operators | Stable, compliant market | Severe restrictions; many products banned |
One-Sentence Summary
This proposal changes hemp testing from “delta-9 only” to “total THC,” jeopardizing CBD access for minors, families, travelers, and legitimate hemp operators across Missouri and the entire country.
Stay Informed
We will continue tracking updates as Congress debates new language. For Missouri guidance, see our Medical Cards page, FAQ, and Rules for Patients & Caregivers.
Disclaimer: This post is educational only and not legal advice. Final congressional language may change before passage.