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Are Mushroom Gummies Legal in Texas? 2026 Legal 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.
Mushroom Gummies Legal Status in Texas:
There are three categories people lump together under the single phrase “mushroom gummies,” and they do not share the same legal status in Texas:
So when someone asks whether mushroom gummies are legal in Texas, the most accurate 2026 response is: functional mushroom gummies are widely available and sold openly, while psilocybin gummies remain prohibited.
If you have been wondering, “Are Mushroom Gummies Legal in Texas?” the honest answer for 2026 is that it depends entirely on what is inside the gummy, because Texas treats functional mushroom products and psilocybin-containing products as two completely different things under the law. This guide breaks down the current 2026 legal landscape, the specific compounds that matter, and where everyday functional Mushroom Products fit in.
Table of contents:
Most older articles on this topic were written in early to mid-2025 and stop there. A few developments make the 2026 law different and worth updating:
The SB 3 veto and its aftermath. On June 22, 2025, Governor Greg Abbott vetoed Senate Bill 3, which broadly banned hemp-derived THC consumables. Abbott called a special session beginning July 21, 2025, and the measure was reintroduced as Senate Bill 5, which passed the Texas Senate 21-8 on third reading on August 1, 2025, but a comprehensive hemp law was not finalized. On September 10, 2025, Abbott issued Executive Order GA-56, directing state agencies to regulate consumable hemp products rather than ban them. This matters because it signals Texas’s broader 2026 direction: regulation of consumable products rather than blanket prohibition. It does not change psilocybin’s status.
Clarifying the penalty group classification. Some online sources incorrectly list psilocybin under Penalty Group 2-A. That is a mistake worth correcting: under the Texas Controlled Substances Act (Health & Safety Code § 481.103), psilocybin and psilocin are listed in Penalty Group 2, alongside substances like MDMA and mescaline. Penalty Group 2-A is a separate category reserved for synthetic cannabinoids such as K2 and Spice, not naturally occurring hallucinogens. Either way, the offense is felony-level, but the correct classification is Penalty Group 2.
Amanita muscaria entered mainstream commerce. By 2026, muscimol and Amanita-based gummies are a frequent source of confusion in this exact search query. A current article needs to acknowledge the category exists; a 2025 article that only mentions psilocybin and functional mushrooms now reads as incomplete.
A functional mushroom gummy is made from non-psychoactive culinary mushrooms. They contain no psilocybin and no controlled compound, which is why they are sold openly in Texas grocery stores, supplement shops, and online.
Common functional mushrooms used in these products include:
These are the same legal Mushroom Products that retailers, including ATLRx, carry in gummy form. For example, ATLRx’s Purely Mushroom line uses only these functional, non-controlled mushroom extracts:
Because these formulas contain no psilocybin, no Amanita muscaria, and no controlled substance, they fall under the standard dietary supplement framework rather than the Texas Controlled Substances Act.
These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
The compound that makes “magic mushroom” gummies illegal is psilocybin (and its related compound psilocin). Under the Texas Controlled Substances Act, psilocybin and psilocin are classified in Penalty Group 2 (Health & Safety Code § 481.103), and Texas is consistently described as having one of the strictest stances in the country.
Key points for 2026:
ATLRx does not sell psilocybin products of any kind.
Under the Controlled Substances Act, psilocybin is classified as a Schedule I substance. This is reflected and enforced by Texas law. Even if a product is purchased online from a state with looser local rules, bringing it into Texas does not make it legal here.
This is the category most 2025 articles miss. Rather than psilocybin, Amanita muscaria contains muscimol and ibotenic acid. As a result of that chemical difference:
The practical takeaway for Texas readers in 2026: Amanita products occupy an unsettled, evolving regulatory space rather than the clearly legal status of functional mushrooms or the clearly illegal status of psilocybin. ATLRx does not sell Amanita muscaria products, and anyone considering them elsewhere should verify current state and local rules before purchasing.
| Gummy Type | Active Compound | Texas Status (2026) | Notes |
| Functional (Lion’s Mane, Reishi, Cordyceps, Chaga, Turkey Tail) | None controlled | Sold legally as supplements | Available in stores and online |
| Psilocybin “magic” | Psilocybin/psilocin | Illegal; controlled substance (Penalty Group 2) | Felony-level; no retail or medical exemption |
| Amanita muscaria | Muscimol / ibotenic acid | Gray area; not federally scheduled, not named in Texas CSA | Some states restrict; verify local rules |
Because the legality comes down to what is inside, label literacy is the single most useful skill for a shopper:
Functional mushroom gummies are sold legally throughout Texas in supplement shops, wellness retailers, and online stores. When choosing a product, shoppers often look for:
This is the lane that ATLRx’s Mushroom Products operate in, with Thrive Gummies by Purely Mushroom, Unwind Gummies by Purely Mushroom, and Clarity Gummies by Purely Mushroom all built on functional, non-controlled mushroom extracts.



Yes. Gummies containing non-psychoactive mushrooms like Lion’s Mane, Reishi, Cordyceps, Chaga, and Turkey Tail are sold legally in Texas as dietary supplements.
No. Psilocybin is a controlled substance under the Texas Controlled Substances Act (Penalty Group 2), and possession, sale, and manufacture are illegal, including in gummy form.
No. Buying psilocybin products from another state and having them shipped into Texas does not make them legal here. Texas law applies once the product enters the state.
Amanita muscaria is not federally scheduled and is not specifically named in the Texas Controlled Substances Act, which places it in a gray, evolving regulatory area. Some states have introduced restrictions. Because state rules in this category are changing rapidly, verify the current status in your state before purchasing.
Read the label. If it lists only functional mushroom species and contains no psilocybin, psilocin, or Amanita muscaria, it falls into the legally sold supplement category. Third-party lab testing adds further transparency.
The biggest 2025 to 2026 development was around hemp regulation (the SB 3 veto and Executive Order GA-56), which signals a regulate-rather-than-ban direction for consumable products. Psilocybin’s status as a controlled substance did not change.
Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. It is also not medical advice. Statements about dietary supplements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration, and these products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Laws change; verify current state and local regulations or consult a qualified attorney for your specific situation.
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