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Is CBD Legal in Indiana? 2026 State Law Explained
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.
CBD Legal Status in Indiana:
Yes, hemp-derived CBD is legal in Indiana for adults. Products must contain 0.3% or less delta-9 THC by dry weight, pass third-party lab testing, carry required labeling, and (under 2025’s2025’s Senate Bill 478) be registered with the state. Smokable hemp retail sales remain prohibited. Marijuana is fully illegal in Indiana.
Whether you’re a longtime Indiana resident or just passing through the Hoosier State, understanding Indiana’s CBD laws in 2026 is essential before you buy, sell, or travel with hemp-derived products. Indiana has legalized hemp-derived CBD — but it enforces some of the most detailed regulations in the country, and the rules are still evolving.
This guide covers everything: the current legal status, the whole legislative history from 2014 to 2026, new SB 478 requirements, what’s still prohibited, where to buy compliant products, and answers to the questions Indiana residents ask most.
Table of contents:
At a Glance, What You Need to Know About CBD Laws in Indiana:
The table below gives you the fast facts. The full analysis follows.
| CATEGORY | STATUS / DETAILS |
|---|---|
| Is CBD Legal in Indiana? | ✅ YES — hemp-derived CBD with ≤0.3% delta-9 THC is legal |
| Smokable Hemp Retail Sales | ❌ PROHIBITED — Class A misdemeanor |
| Delta-9 THC Limit | 0.3% on a dry weight basis |
| Minimum Age to Buy CBD | No state minimum; retailers may require 18+ or 21+ |
| Third-Party Lab Testing | ✅ Required — batch-specific COA with QR/barcode link |
| Product Registration (SB 478, 2025) | ✅ Required — register with Indiana ATC |
| Manufacturer Permit (SB 478) | ✅ Required for hemp cannabinoid product manufacturers |
| Medical Marijuana Program | ❌ Not available in Indiana |
| Recreational Marijuana | ❌ Illegal |
| Online CBD Purchases (shipped to IN) | ✅ Legal — compliant hemp CBD may be shipped in |
| Delta-8 THC Status | ⚠️ Gray area — pending restrictions under SB 250 (2026) |
| Key Laws | 2018 Farm Bill · SB 52 (2018) · SB 516 (2019) · SB 478 (2025) |
Yes, hemp-derived CBD is legal in Indiana. According to the federal 2018 Farm Bill and Indiana’s state statutes, any cannabis-derived product with 0.3% or less delta-9 THC on a dry weight basis is considered industrial hemp, not marijuana. Indiana residents may purchase, possess, and use CBD oils, gummies, topicals, tinctures, capsules, and other compliant hemp-derived products without a prescription.
However, Indiana is not a laissez-faire CBD state. It has strict testing, labeling, and licensing requirements, enforces them actively — including a 2024 state police raid on 57 CBD stores for labeling violations — and has added significant new regulatory requirements through 2025 legislation.
Important 2026 Note: Indiana’s Senate Bill 250 is advancing through the 2026 legislative session. If enacted, it would align Indiana law with new federal rules that count all THC forms toward the 0.3% limit and cap total THC at 0.4 mg per container — significantly impacting delta-8 and other hemp-derived cannabinoid products. Monitor this bill’s progress if you’re a retailer or frequent buyer.
Indiana’s hemp and CBD framework has evolved through a series of targeted legislative actions. Understanding the history explains why Indiana’s regulations are more detailed than most states and why further changes are likely.
In Indiana, CBD products cannot contain more than 0.3% delta-9 THC on a dry weight basis. Products exceeding this threshold are classified as marijuana under Indiana law — a Schedule I controlled substance subject to criminal prosecution.
CBD products derived from hemp must be tested by an accredited, independent laboratory. Lab reports must confirm:
The batch-specific Certificate of Analysis (COA) must be accessible via a QR code or barcode on the product label.
Every CBD product sold in Indiana must display:
Indiana has actively enforced labeling compliance, including a 2024 statewide enforcement sweep that resulted in the seizure of products from dozens of retailers. Compliance is not optional.
Individuals wishing to cultivate or process hemp in Indiana must hold a license through the OISC, which requires an FBI background check. Under SB 478, manufacturers of hemp-derived cannabinoid products must also obtain a state manufacturer permit and may only produce such products within Indiana.
Senate Bill 478 introduced the following requirements, which represent the most significant regulatory expansion since 2019:
No, Delta-8 THC occupies an uncertain legal space in Indiana, and that space is rapidly shrinking.
Delta-8 is made from hemp-sourced CBD through a chemical conversion process. Because the original 2018 Farm Bill defined legal hemp by its delta-9 THC content only, products with high delta-8 THC concentrations technically complied with the letter of the law, even though they produce psychoactive effects. In Indiana, delta-8 products were sold in gas stations and smoke shops with little oversight.
Indiana’s Senate Bill 478 (2025) began tightening the framework around intoxicating hemp-derived cannabinoids. Senate Bill 250 (2026), currently advancing through the legislature, goes further: it proposes to adopt the federal approach of counting all THC forms toward the 0.3% limit and to ban lab-synthesized cannabinoids outright, which would effectively prohibit most current delta-8 products.
Recommendation for consumers: Exercise caution with delta-8 products in Indiana. The regulatory status may change before or during November 2026 when federal changes take effect. If you purchase delta-8 products, verify the total-THC line on the batch COA and retain purchase documentation.
CBD products are available at pharmacies, natural health retailers, specialty CBD stores, vape shops, and some convenience stores throughout Indiana. However, Indiana’s strict labeling enforcement — including the 2024 state police action targeting 57 stores — means product quality and compliance vary significantly by retailer. Always verify that in-store products carry a scannable COA link on the label.
Purchasing CBD online from a reputable retailer like ATLRx provides Indiana shoppers several meaningful advantages: access to batch-specific COAs before purchase, broader product selection, direct-to-door delivery, and the ability to research a brand’s manufacturing standards, sourcing transparency, and customer reviews.
Indiana law permits the interstate shipment of compliant, hemp-derived CBD products. When evaluating a CBD retailer online, look for:
Indiana does not have a state medical marijuana program, so dispensaries in Indiana sell hemp-derived CBD only — not medical or recreational cannabis. Dispensaries may enforce age requirements (18+ or 21+) at their discretion. If you have questions about a product’s compliance, dispensary staff are generally a better resource than convenience store clerks.


No, recreational and medical marijuana will remain illegal in Indiana until 2026.
Multiple reform efforts failed during the 2025 legislative session: House Bill 1178 and Senate Bill 341 (both seeking a medical marijuana program) and House Bill 1630 (recreational legalization) were all defeated. Out-of-state medical marijuana cards are not recognized in Indiana – possessing marijuana with a valid card is still a criminal offense. Bringing cannabis from neighboring legal states (Illinois, Michigan) into Indiana constitutes illegal transport and can result in drug trafficking charges.
Governor Mike Braun has signaled cautious openness to future therapeutic cannabis legislation, but as of early 2026, Republican legislative leadership remains opposed. Legal changes are unlikely in the near term.
Key distinction: CBD derived from hemp (≤0.3% delta-9 THC) is legal. In other words, marijuana (cannabis with more than 0.3% delta-9 THC) is not. Buying CBD products from ATLRx and other compliant retailers is legal; purchasing marijuana in Indiana is not.
Traveling within Indiana with compliant, hemp-derived CBD products is generally permitted. Keep the product’s original packaging (with labeling and QR code) accessible to confirm compliance if questioned by law enforcement. Products must contain 0.3% or less delta-9 THC.
Crossing state lines with CBD requires checking both the destination state’s laws and applicable federal transportation rules. While federal law protects the interstate transport of lawfully produced hemp, products that comply in one state may not comply in another. States like Wisconsin have more restrictive rules than federal law, while states like Illinois permit recreational marijuana entirely.
Given Indiana’s active enforcement environment, choosing a compliant product matters more here than in many other states. Use this five-step checklist:
Hemp-derived CBD is legal in Indiana — but the state means business when it comes to enforcement. Whether you’re a manufacturer, a retailer, or a consumer, compliance with testing, labeling, and licensing requirements is mandatory, not optional. As Senate Bill 250 advances through the 2026 legislative session, the rules around delta-8 and other intoxicating hemp-derived cannabinoids are likely to tighten significantly before the end of the year.
The safest approach: buy from brands that make compliance easy to verify. That means published batch COAs, clear labeling, U.S.-grown hemp, and transparent manufacturing practices.
At ATLRx, every product in our hemp-derived CBD lineup is third-party lab tested, compliant with federal and Indiana state law, and fully labeled so you can verify what you’re getting before you buy. Browse our selection of CBD oils, CBD gummies, CBD topicals, and more to buy your favorite legal CBD products.
Yes. Hemp-derived CBD containing 0.3% or less delta-9 THC is legal for adult purchase and use in Indiana. Products must be properly tested, labeled, and (under SB 478) registered with the state. Smokable hemp flower retail sales remain prohibited.
Yes. Compliant, hemp-derived CBD products can be shipped to Indiana from online retailers, including ATLRx. Ensure the retailer provides batch-specific COAs and that products meet Indiana’s labeling requirements.
There is no statewide minimum age for hemp-derived CBD purchases. However, individual retailers may require buyers to be 18 or 21, and Senate Bill 478 introduced age restrictions on certain THC-containing hemp products. Always check with your specific retailer.
Yes. Full-spectrum CBD is legal in Indiana, provided the final product contains 0.3% or less delta-9 THC per the batch COA, meets all labeling requirements, and is registered under SB 478 rules. Full-spectrum products contain trace amounts of other cannabinoids, including delta-9 THC, so testing is critical.
Yes, but you must comply with Indiana’s full regulatory framework: state licensing through the OISC for cultivation/processing, third-party batch testing, mandatory labeling, and (under SB 478) product registration with the ATC and a manufacturer permit. If non-compliance is not addressed, fines and product seizures may result, as well as criminal charges.
Retail sales of smokable hemp flower are prohibited in Indiana. Manufacturing, delivering, or possessing smokable hemp is a Class A misdemeanor. Private home possession is a legal gray area, but purchasing smokable hemp at retail is not permitted. Indiana law enforcement has difficulty distinguishing hemp flower from marijuana, which creates additional practical risk.
No. Recreational and medical marijuana are both illegal in Indiana as of 2026. There is no recognition of out-of-state medical marijuana cards. Possession of marijuana is a criminal offense, and importing it from neighboring legal states such as Illinois or Michigan can constitute drug trafficking.
Legal Disclaimer
The information in this article is provided for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Hemp and CBD laws are subject to change at the federal and state levels. Laws cited reflect publicly available information as of February 2026. We recommend consulting official Indiana state resources and a qualified attorney for guidance specific to your circumstances.
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