CBD & Δ9 in Florida — 2026 Law + Nov 2026 Change | Gold Naturals
Through November 13, 2026, hemp-derived Δ9 THC products are legal to buy, sell, and consume in Florida under the federal 2018 Farm Bill and Florida's SB 1020 — provided they contain less than 0.3% Δ9 THC by dry weight and meet FDACS packaging, labeling, and testing requirements. Gold Naturals products meet all of these.
Important: a new Florida law takes effect November 13, 2026 that limits total THC per container to 0.4 milligrams — well below where any functional Δ9 product currently sits. After that date, most hemp Δ9 products (including ours) likely cannot be sold in Florida in their current formulation.
What this means practically:
- Right now (May 2026): all our products ship to Florida and are fully legal
- Before November 13, 2026: still legal — customers who want to stock up can
- After November 13, 2026: Δ9 gummies, tinctures, and softgels in their current formulations likely cannot be sold in Florida; topicals and ultra-low-THC isolate-based products may continue
- We're tracking this closely and will update this page as the situation develops, including any legal challenges, regulatory clarifications, or product reformulations we develop for the Florida market
If you're a Florida customer, read on for the full picture — what's allowed now, what's changing, and what your options will look like under the new law.
Florida hemp law — current state (May 2026)
✓ Hemp-derived Δ9 THC products (federal Farm Bill compliant)
Under both the 2018 federal Farm Bill and Florida's SB 1020, hemp-derived products with less than 0.3% Δ9 THC by dry weight are legal in Florida. This includes:
- Δ9 gummies (our 5mg and 10mg variants)
- Tinctures
- Softgels
- Edibles, beverages, and topicals
✓ CBD products (broadly legal)
CBD is not federally scheduled. Florida has allowed CBD product sales since 2017 (with regulatory framework formalized in 2019). Our CBD tinctures, softgels, CBD-only gummies, and salve all ship to Florida.
✓ CBG, CBN, CBC, and other minor cannabinoids
Same as CBD. Not federally scheduled. Legal in Florida.
⚠ Smokable hemp flower
Currently legal but subject to the same November 13 total-THC limit. Likely effectively banned after that date.
Florida packaging + labeling requirements (Rule 5K-4.034)
Florida requires:
- Child-resistant packaging on all consumable hemp products
- Third-party lab testing with batch-level COAs
- Age restriction (21+) for sales
- Clear labeling of cannabinoid content
- Warning statements where applicable
We meet all of these. Our COAs from UDAF and APRC are linked from the certificates of analysis page; our packaging is child-resistant; our checkout enforces age verification.
What's changing November 13, 2026
A new Florida law takes effect on November 13, 2026 that introduces a strict per-container THC limit:
No more than 0.4 milligrams of total THC per container for any hemp-derived consumable product (gummies, beverages, edibles, tinctures, softgels).
"Total THC" includes:
- Δ9 THC (the active form)
- Δ8 THC
- THCA (the precursor — converts to THC when heated)
- Other THC isomers
To put 0.4mg per container in context:
- Our 5mg Utah Δ9 gummy contains 5mg of Δ9 per single gummy — a 10-pack jar contains 50mg
- A 1oz Sleep tincture contains 30 droppers' worth of cannabinoids per bottle — total Δ9 well above 0.4mg per bottle
- Even our CBD-only gummies, which use full-spectrum hemp extract, contain trace amounts of Δ9 that exceed the 0.4mg per-container limit
Net effect: virtually every functional hemp Δ9 product currently on the market — ours and competitors' — will be over the new Florida limit. The law functions as a near-total ban on consumable hemp Δ9 in Florida.
What might still be allowed in Florida after November 13
- CBD isolate products that contain literally zero Δ9 THC and no THCA (purified single-cannabinoid products). We don't currently make isolate products, but we're evaluating Florida-specific formulations.
- Topical products that don't deliver THC systemically — our Muscle + Joint Salve works locally with no absorption into the bloodstream. We're confirming whether the new rule applies to topicals (the law's text focuses on consumable products); preliminary read is topicals are unaffected, but we'll update.
- Non-hemp wellness products (CBD-isolate softgels, etc.) — to be confirmed pending the final FDACS implementation guidance.
What we're doing about it
- Tracking the law and any pending legal challenges. Florida's hemp industry has historically responded to restrictive legislation with court challenges. We'll update this page as the situation develops.
- Evaluating Florida-specific formulations — particularly CBD isolate options that could remain compliant under the new per-container THC cap.
- Honoring customer subscriptions through their next renewal for Florida customers — your existing Subscribe & Save orders will continue to ship through November 13, 2026, after which we'll contact you about options.
- Notifying Florida customers via email as soon as the post-November landscape clarifies.
Florida's November 13 law actually mirrors a parallel federal change
The Florida law taking effect November 13, 2026 is not unique to Florida. It aligns with Public Law 119-37 Section 781, a federal hemp redefinition taking effect November 12, 2026 (one day before Florida) that caps total THC at the same 0.4mg per container limit nationwide. Florida moved early to align state law with the upcoming federal standard.
What this means: even if Florida's state law were repealed tomorrow, the federal change on November 12 would still apply. The substance of the cliff isn't a Florida state choice — it's a federal redefinition that Florida is implementing in lockstep.
Read our full November 12 hemp law guide → for the broader federal context.
How Florida law connects to federal law
The 2018 Farm Bill establishes a national baseline: hemp with ≤0.3% Δ9 THC by dry weight is legal at the federal level. States can be more permissive (legalize recreational cannabis) or more restrictive (ban hemp Δ9 entirely or, like Florida's upcoming law, restrict it via per-container limits).
Florida's November 13 law doesn't change federal law — hemp Δ9 remains federally legal. But Florida's state-level rule supersedes the federal default for in-state sales. This is the same legal pattern other restrictive states have used.
Which Gold Naturals products currently ship to Florida (through Nov 13, 2026)
All of them.
Δ9 gummies (federally compliant, currently FL-legal)
- Entourage Δ9 Gummy — 5mg or 10mg
- Δ9 + CBN Sleep Gummy — 5mg or 10mg
- Δ9 + CBG Muscle + Joint Gummy — 5mg or 10mg
- Variety Pack
- Δ9 Gummy Bundle
CBD-forward gummies
Tinctures
- Sleep Tincture — Light / Medium / Heavy
- Stress Tincture — Light / Medium / Heavy
- Muscle + Joint Tincture — Light / Medium / Heavy
- Sample Pack
Soft gels (100ct)
- Sleep Soft Gels — Light / Medium / Heavy
- Stress Soft Gels — Light / Medium / Heavy
- Muscle + Joint Soft Gels — Light / Medium / Heavy
Topicals (likely unaffected by November 13 law — confirming)
- Muscle + Joint Salve — 0.5oz / 1oz / 2oz
How to buy hemp Δ9 in Florida (May 2026 through November 13, 2026)
Online from us: Standard shipping applies. Free shipping on orders over $75. Most Florida orders arrive in 2–5 business days. Age verification (21+) at checkout.
Discreet packaging: Unmarked outer packaging on every shipment.
Subscribe & Save: Available now. Florida subscribers will be contacted before November 13 about post-law options.
In-store: Florida licensed hemp retailers and CBD specialty stores carry hemp Δ9 products through November 13. Look for FDACS license number displayed at point of sale.
If you want to stock up before November 13
The full Gold Naturals product lineup ships to Florida through November 13, 2026. If you're a regular customer of a specific product and want to ensure supply through 2026 and into 2027:
- Subscribe & Save locks in the lower price and ships on your schedule through November 13
- Bundle ordering (three jars at once) lets you stock up at the bundle discount
- The Sample Pack is the lowest-commitment way to try Light/Medium/Heavy tinctures and decide which to stock up on
We're not making this recommendation to drive sales urgency — we're telling you what we'd tell a friend. The new law is restrictive enough that most customers will be left without Florida-compliant hemp Δ9 options in their preferred product after November 13. Plan accordingly.
Frequently asked questions
Is Δ9 legal in Florida in 2026?
Yes, through November 13, 2026. Hemp Δ9 products meeting the federal ≤0.3% Δ9 THC by dry weight threshold are legal under both federal law and Florida SB 1020. After November 13, 2026, a new Florida law takes effect capping total THC at 0.4mg per container, which functionally restricts most consumable Δ9 products.
What does the November 13, 2026 Florida hemp law do?
The new law sets a strict per-container limit: no more than 0.4 milligrams of total THC per container for any hemp-derived consumable product (gummies, beverages, edibles, tinctures, softgels). "Total THC" includes Δ9, Δ8, THCA, and other THC isomers. This limit is well below where any functional Δ9 product sits, effectively restricting most hemp Δ9 consumables in Florida.
Will Gold Naturals products still ship to Florida after November 13, 2026?
Through November 13: yes, the full lineup. After November 13: our Δ9 gummies, tinctures, and softgels in current formulations likely cannot be sold in Florida. The Muscle + Joint Salve (topical, no systemic THC absorption) likely remains compliant. We're evaluating Florida-specific formulations for after the cliff and will update this page.
Should I stock up before November 13?
If you're a regular customer of a specific Gold Naturals Δ9 product and want continuity through 2026 into 2027, stocking up before November 13 is reasonable. We're not creating false urgency — we're telling you what we'd tell a friend.
Can I be arrested for possessing hemp Δ9 in Florida right now?
Not if the product is legally compliant (≤0.3% Δ9 by dry weight, properly labeled, from a licensed seller). After November 13, products that don't meet the 0.4mg per-container limit become non-compliant and possession of significant quantities could become an issue depending on FDACS implementation.
Is CBD legal in Florida?
Yes, broadly. CBD is not federally scheduled and has been legal in Florida since 2017. The November 13 law's effect on CBD-only products that contain trace THC from full-spectrum extracts is unclear and we're awaiting FDACS implementation guidance.
Does the November 13 law affect Florida's medical marijuana program?
No. Florida's medical marijuana program (operated through OMMU) is a separate legal framework. Patients with qualifying conditions who hold a medical card can continue to purchase higher-THC products through licensed Florida dispensaries.
Will hemp Δ9 show up on a Florida drug test?
Yes. Hemp-derived Δ9 metabolizes the same as cannabis Δ9. If you're employment-tested, use the Muscle + Joint Salve (topical, no systemic absorption) or stick to CBD-only options without trace Δ9.
Will the November 13 law be challenged in court?
Possibly. Florida's hemp industry has historically responded to restrictive legislation with legal challenges. We're tracking the situation. Pre-emption claims (that the federal Farm Bill supersedes state per-container limits on hemp products) are one possible legal theory. We'll update this page as developments occur.
Can I bring Δ9 gummies into Florida from another state?
Until November 13: same federal compliance rules apply (≤0.3% Δ9 by dry weight). After November 13: the per-container limit applies regardless of where you purchased the product. Bringing in non-compliant product from another state could subject you to Florida possession rules.
Sources
- Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services — Hemp/CBD Program — primary regulatory authority
- Florida Statute §581.217 — Hemp program — primary legal text
- Florida Rule 5K-4.034 (FDAC) — packaging, testing, labeling requirements
- Industry coverage of November 13 hemp law change (Triangle Hemp Wellness, Brewer's Law, Legal Awareness Florida 2026)
This page provides general information about Florida hemp law as of May 2026. It is not legal advice. Florida hemp law is changing materially on November 13, 2026 — for your specific situation, consult the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) or a licensed Florida attorney. Last updated: 2026-05-15.