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Is Delta 9 Legal in Louisiana? The Complete 2026 Guide
THE STATEMENTS ON THIS BLOG ARE NOT INTENDED TO DIAGNOSE, TREAT, CURE, OR PREVENT ANY DISEASE. THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION HAS NOT EVALUATED ANY STATEMENTS CONTAINED WITHIN THE BLOG. ATLRX DOES NOT IN ANY WAY GUARANTEE OR WARRANT THE ACCURACY, COMPLETENESS, OR USEFULNESS OF ANY MESSAGE. THE INFORMATION CONTAINED WITHIN THIS BLOG IS FOR GENERAL INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY.
Delta 9 Legal Status in Louisiana:
Yes. Hemp-derived Delta 9 THC is legal in Louisiana for adults 21 and older, provided the product contains 0.3% or less Delta-9 THC by dry weight, no more than 5 mg of THC per serving, and no more than 40 mg of THC per package. It must be purchased from a licensed retailer or compliant online vendor, not from a gas station. Products that can be inhaled, such as vapes and flower, are prohibited. Delta 9 derived from marijuana remains illegal in Louisiana.
If you have been asking yourself whether Delta 9 is legal in Louisiana, you are in good company. Thousands of Louisiana residents search for this answer every month, and given how much the state’s hemp laws have changed since 2022, a clear and current answer matters. The short answer is yes, hemp-derived Delta 9 THC is legal in Louisiana for adults aged 21 and older, but it comes with specific rules around potency, product type, packaging, and where you can buy it. This guide covers every detail, including the most current 2026 regulations, so you can shop with confidence.
Table of contents:
Congress passed P.L. 119-37 in November 2025, which amends the federal definition of hemp. The new standard takes effect on November 12, 2026. Key changes include: (1) the THC measurement shifts from Delta-9 only to total THC concentration (including THCA) of not more than 0.3% on a dry weight basis, (2) a strict 0.4 mg total THC per container limit is imposed on finished hemp-derived products, and (3) synthetic cannabinoids are excluded from the definition of hemp. Note: The 0.877 THCA conversion factor is a standard lab testing practice for molecular weight adjustment, not a formula specified in the statute. At 0.4 mg per container, most consumable hemp products currently on the market — including 5 mg gummies — would no longer qualify as hemp under federal law. ATLRx is monitoring this closely and will update this guide as soon as federal enforcement guidance is published.
Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol is the main psychoactive ingredient in cannabis. As a result of this chemical, cannabis produces the intoxicating effects associated with its use. Hemp and marijuana plants both contain Delta 9. Legally, the only difference between them is the concentration.
In accordance with the 2018 Farm Bill, cannabis plants containing 0.3% or less Delta-9 THC by dry weight are not controlled substances under federal law. This definition made it possible for hemp-derived Delta 9 products to be produced and sold legally across the country, including in Louisiana.
Delta 9 molecules are chemically identical whether they are derived from hemp or marijuana. Except for the source plant and concentration, there is no legal difference:
| Hemp-Derived Delta 9 | Marijuana-Derived Delta 9 | |
|---|---|---|
| Source | Hemp plant (Cannabis sativa L., 0.3% THC or less) | Marijuana plant (over 0.3% THC) |
| Federal status | Legal (2018 Farm Bill) | Controlled substance (Schedule I) |
| Louisiana status | Legal with compliance (adults 21+) | Illegal for recreational use |
| Prescription required? | No | Yes (medical marijuana program only) |
| Available at ATLRx? | Yes | No |
Under the 2018 Farm Bill, hemp and its derivatives, extracts, cannabinoids, isomers, and salts were legal as long as they contained less than 0.3% Delta-9 THC on a dry weight basis. As a result of this legislation, hemp was removed from the federal Controlled Substances Act, and states were able to establish their own hemp regulatory frameworks.
A 2020 DEA interim final rule clarified that hemp-derived products meeting the 0.3% Delta-9 THC threshold in their finished form are not controlled substances, though intermediate materials exceeding the threshold during processing may still be subject to Controlled Substances Act controls. No medical card, prescription, or special permit is needed to purchase compliant hemp-derived products, provided you meet the state age requirement and are purchasing from a licensed retailer or compliant online vendor.
Important:
“Federally legal” does not automatically mean “legal everywhere.” Louisiana has added its own rules on top of the federal standard, including potency caps, product type bans, and retail channel restrictions. Always check the current state law before purchasing.
Yes, hemp-derived Delta 9 THC is legal in Louisiana. The state has built a layered regulatory framework for consumable hemp products that has been updated multiple times since 2019. As of 2026, Louisiana’s rules are among the most detailed in the South, focusing on potency limits, product formats, retail licensing, labeling, and the age of the buyer.
The critical conditions for a Delta 9 product to be legal in Louisiana are:
Understanding how Louisiana’s rules evolved helps you appreciate why the current regulations look the way they do.
| Year / Act | Key Change |
|---|---|
| 2019 — House Bill 491 (Act 164) | Legally separated hemp from marijuana in the Louisiana law. Aligned the state with the 2018 Farm Bill. Hemp derivatives with 0.3% or less Delta-9 THC by dry weight became legal. |
| 2021 — HB 640 (Act 336) | Redefined consumable hemp products, banned the sale of hemp products intended for inhalation, established the 1% total THC concentration limit, and required product registration with the state. |
| 2022 — Act 498 (HB 758) | Created the “adult-use consumable hemp product” category for products containing more than 0.5 mg total THC per package. Set the purchase age at 21+ for adult-use products (18+ remained for products under 0.5 mg THC). Capped THC at 8 mg per serving. Required 0.3% Delta-9 THC concentration limit and total THC not exceeding 1% by dry weight. Added labeling and testing requirements. |
| 2025 (Jan 1) — Act 752 (HB 952, signed 2024) | Reduced serving size limit from 8 mg to 5 mg THC. Capped total THC per package at 40 mg. Banned hemp flower retail. Prohibited gas station and convenience store sales (qualified truck stops exempt). Raised purchase age to 21 for all consumable hemp products. Required drug test warning on all labels. Required non-beverage products to be stored behind the counter. Capped tinctures at 30 mL / 1 mg THC per mL. Barred new bars and restaurants from obtaining hemp permits (approximately 220 establishments with permits issued before June 2024 were grandfathered in). |
| 2026 — HB 539 (Pending) | Proposes to authorize additional bars and restaurants to sell compliant consumable hemp products, including hemp beverages, expanding beyond the approximately 220 establishments already grandfathered in under Act 752. Does not modify THC limits or other product regulations. Under legislative review as of April 2026 |
| Nov 12, 2026 — P.L. 119-37 | Federal hemp definition amendment takes effect. Shifts THC measurement from Delta-9 only to total THC concentration (including THCA) of not more than 0.3% on a dry weight basis. Imposes a 0.4 mg total THC per container limit on finished products. Excludes synthetic cannabinoids from the hemp definition. The 0.877 THCA conversion factor is a standard lab practice, not part of the statutory language. ATLRx will update this guide when enforcement guidance is available. |
| Product / Scenario | Legal Status in Louisiana (2026) |
|---|---|
| Hemp-derived Delta 9 gummies (5 mg/serving or less) | Legal |
| Hemp-derived Delta 9 beverages (5 mg/serving or less) | Legal |
| Hemp-derived Delta 9 tinctures (compliant potency) | Legal |
| Hemp-derived Delta 9 topicals | Legal (low or no intoxicating THC) |
| Hemp-derived Delta 9 vapes | Illegal |
| Hemp flower / pre-rolls | Illegal (banned January 1, 2025) |
| Products sold at gas stations or convenience stores | Illegal (qualified truck stops are exempt) |
| Purchasing if under age 21 | Illegal |
| Marijuana-derived Delta 9 (recreational) | Illegal |
| Medical marijuana (licensed dispensaries only) | Legal with a valid doctor’s recommendation |
Louisiana permits the sale and purchase of the following hemp-derived Delta 9 products for adults 21 and older, when sold by a licensed retailer or compliant online vendor:
The following are explicitly prohibited in Louisiana as of January 1, 2025:
Note on Retail Stores:
Licensed specialty hemp shops, CBD stores, and adult-use wellness retailers are the correct purchase points for in-person Delta 9 shopping in Louisiana. If you see Delta 9 products at a gas station, convenience store, or corner store after January 1, 2025, those products are not in compliance with state law (qualified truck stops are exempt from this restriction).
Not every seller follows Louisiana’s rules. Be sure to use this checklist before purchasing any Delta 9 product in Louisiana, whether you are buying it in a store or online.
Buyer’s Compliance Checklist
✓ Check the label: THC per serving must be 5 mg or less.
✓ On the label, there is a QR code that can be scanned. Make sure it links to a batch-specific COA from an accredited third-party lab.
✓ On the COA: check total THC (Delta-9 + THCA x 0.877) is within legal limits.
✓ Make sure the product is not inhalable (not a vape, flower, or pre-roll).
✓ Confirm you are buying from a licensed retailer or compliant online vendor.
✓ You must be at least 21 years old to complete the purchase.
Since Act 344 took effect in 2023, Delta 9 products are no longer available at gas stations or convenience stores in Louisiana. Compliant options include:
Ordering Delta 9 online from a reputable retailer is a legal and convenient option for Louisiana residents. Online shopping often provides greater product variety and more transparent testing documentation than local retail. When choosing an online vendor, look for:
ATLRx checks all of these boxes. Browse our Delta 9 collection and use the product filters to find gummies, tinctures, and beverages that meet Louisiana’s requirements.



Louisiana’s hemp laws cover multiple cannabinoids. Here is a quick reference to the most commonly asked-about compounds.
| Cannabinoid | Legal in Louisiana? | Key Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Hemp-derived Delta 9 THC | Yes | 0.3% or less by dry weight; 5 mg/serving; 40 mg/package; adults 21+; no inhalables |
| Hemp-derived Delta 8 THC | Yes | Same product-type, potency, and retail rules as Delta 9; no inhalables |
| Hemp-derived Delta 10 THC | Yes | Same framework as Delta 8 and Delta 9 |
| CBD (cannabidiol) | Yes | Non-intoxicating; fewer restrictions; widely available in stores and online |
| THCA | Conditional | Must be evaluated using the total THC formula (Delta-9 + THCA x 0.877); can exceed the legal threshold even at low raw Delta-9 readings |
| Marijuana-derived THC (any) | No (recreational) | Only available via licensed medical marijuana pharmacies with a valid physician recommendation |
At ATLRx, every product in our Delta 9 lineup is built to comply with state and federal requirements. Here is what Louisiana shoppers can expect from ATLRx:
Our Louisiana-friendly Delta 9 product categories include gummies, tinctures, and beverages. Visit the ATLRx Delta 9 collection page to browse current inventory, view lab results, and place your order with free shipping available.
So, is Delta 9 legal in Louisiana? Yes, with important conditions. Hemp-derived Delta 9 THC products that comply with Louisiana’s concentration limits, product type restrictions, serving size caps, labeling requirements, and retail channel rules are fully legal for adults 21 and older. The rules have grown more specific with each legislative session, which means it pays to buy from vendors who stay current with state law and back every product with transparent third-party lab results.
ATLRx is committed to making it straightforward for Louisiana shoppers to find compliant, lab-verified Delta 9 products. If you need help determining compliance with Louisiana law, our team can help. Shop our Delta 9 collection today and see the difference that real lab transparency makes.
No. In 2026, recreational marijuana will remain illegal in Louisiana. Medical marijuana is legal only for qualifying patients through licensed dispensaries and requires a valid physician recommendation.
The Delta 9 THC found in hemp and marijuana is the same molecule. Depending on the source and concentration, there is a legal difference between plants. It is legal in Louisiana to sell Delta-9 products derived from hemp that contain no more than 0.3% Delta-9 THC by dry weight. Only the state’s medical marijuana program offers Delta 9 derived from marijuana.
Yes. Hemp-derived Delta 9 gummies are legal in Louisiana for adults 21 and older, provided each serving contains 5 mg of THC or less, and the total package does not exceed 40 mg of THC. They must be purchased from a licensed retailer or a compliant online vendor.
In order to purchase Delta 9 or any other consumable hemp product, you must be 21 years or older in Louisiana. The 21+ age requirement for adult-use products (those containing more than 0.5 mg THC) was first established by Act 498 in 2022. Act 752, effective January 1, 2025, extended the 21+ requirement to all consumable hemp products.
No. Act 752 (HB 952), effective January 1, 2025, prohibits the sale of consumable hemp products, including Delta 9, at gas stations and convenience stores in Louisiana. Qualified truck stops are exempt. Purchase from a licensed hemp specialty retailer or a compliant online vendor.
It may. Louisiana law requires that all consumable hemp product labels carry a warning that use may result in a failed drug test. THC from any source, including hemp-derived Delta 9, can accumulate in the body and produce a positive result on standard drug screenings.
You may possess and use compliant hemp-derived Delta 9 products within Louisiana. It is important to note that Delta 9 laws differ considerably from state to state. Always check the laws of any state you are traveling to before crossing state lines with hemp-derived products.
No. Hemp-derived Delta 9 products can be purchased by adults 21 and older without a medical card or prescription. They are not part of Louisiana’s medical marijuana program.
Every ATLRx product page includes a direct link to the Certificate of Analysis for that product. You can also scan the QR code on any ATLRx product label to access the batch-specific COA directly from your phone.
Congress passed P.L. 119-37 in November 2025. Section 781 amends the federal definition of hemp by shifting from a Delta-9-only THC measurement to a total THC concentration (including THCA) of not more than 0.3% on a dry weight basis, and imposes a 0.4 mg total THC per container limit on finished hemp-derived products. Synthetic cannabinoids are also excluded from the definition of hemp. These changes take effect on November 12, 2026, and are expected to significantly impact the legal status of most consumable hemp products currently on the market. ATLRx is monitoring this closely. This guide will be updated as soon as official enforcement guidance is available.
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