cannabis.wine / intel

Missouri

Last updated July 7, 2026 AI-drafted — pending review

Missouri Governor Kehoe signed the Intoxicating Cannabinoid Control Act (HB 2641) on April 23, 2026, effective November 12, 2026 — aligning state law with the federal cliff. Post-cliff, intoxicating hemp may only be sold by state-licensed marijuana dispensaries. Notable beverage carve-out contingency: if Congress delays the federal ban, Missouri law still prohibits everything except intoxicating hemp beverages. AG Catherine Hanaway is actively enforcing pre-cliff — 33+ cease-and-desist letters issued to hemp retailers in April 2026 using consumer-protection statutes.

Status
Restrictions
DTC shipping
Currently permitted under federal Farm Bill; ban post-Nov 12 unless dispensary-licensed
Serving cap
None currently in state statute for federally-compliant hemp; Nov 12: no intoxicating hemp permitted outside licensed cannabis channel (potential beverage carve-out contingent on federal delay)
Container cap
None currently; Nov 12: federal 0.4mg/container standard applies; state carve-out for beverages if federal delayed
Age gate
21+ (Executive Order 24-10 and licensed cannabis rules)
License
Post-Nov 12: state-licensed marijuana dispensary license (DCR) required for intoxicating hemp product sales
Regulator
Missouri Division of Cannabis Regulation (DCR) — licensed marijuana; Missouri Division of Alcohol and Tobacco Control (ATC) — proposed hemp beverage authority; Missouri Attorney General's office — active enforcement
Current rule effective
August 1, 2024
Next known change — in 117 days
November 12, 2026 — Intoxicating Cannabinoid Control Act takes effect concurrently with federal P.L. 119-37 § 781. Intoxicating hemp restricted to state-licensed marijuana dispensaries. Beverage carve-out preserved if federal enforcement is delayed.
Federal alignment (P.L. 119-37 § 781)
Aligned with federal HB 2641's November 12, 2026 effective date and 0.4mg standard mirror federal P.L. 119-37 § 781. Structured to converge with federal law. Beverage carve-out only activates as a contingency if federal enforcement is delayed by Congress.

Retail channels

  • Currently: hemp retailers, smoke shops, convenience stores, liquor stores — under active AG enforcement pressure (33+ cease-and-desist letters, April 2026)
  • Post-Nov 12: state-licensed marijuana dispensaries only for intoxicating hemp
  • Beverage-specific channel: contingent carve-out — only activated if federal cliff is delayed
  • Missouri Cannabis Trade Association (industry group) lab testing has driven much of the AG's evidence base
  • Litigation: American Shaman v. AG Hanaway — active state-level case

Statutes & bills cited

  • Intoxicating Cannabinoid Control Act (HB 2641, 2026) — signed by Gov. Kehoe April 23, 2026; effective November 12, 2026
  • Executive Order 24-10 (August 2024, Gov. Parson) — ban on intoxicating hemp outside licensed dispensaries
  • Missouri Constitution Article XIV — adult-use cannabis (2022 voter initiative)
  • Mo. Rev. Stat. Chapter 195 — Comprehensive Drug Control Act
  • SB 518 (2025) — proposed Missouri Hemp Consumer Protection Act (predecessor framework, not enacted)
  • SB 904 (2026) — Senate companion to HB 2641 during session

Missouri’s intoxicating hemp landscape has been shaped by aggressive executive and enforcement action rather than statute. Following the 2022 voter initiative that legalized adult-use cannabis (Article XIV of the Missouri Constitution), an unregulated hemp market rapidly grew alongside the licensed cannabis system — with products testing at up to 1,000mg THC per unit reportedly sold in gas stations and smoke shops. Governor Mike Parson issued Executive Order 24-10 in August 2024, directing DHSS and other agencies to use existing food and drug authorities to ban intoxicating hemp outside licensed marijuana dispensaries. AG Andrew Bailey (2024-2025) launched an investigation and cease-and-desist campaign. His successor, AG Catherine Hanaway, expanded the enforcement effort. On March 31, 2026, Hanaway sued American Shaman; through April 2026, she issued cease-and-desist letters to 33 hemp retailers using consumer-protection statutes. The legal theory relies on DEA interpretation letters from 2023-2024 treating THCA as counting toward total THC — a theory disputed by hemp retailers who argue the 2018 Farm Bill uses only delta-9. On the legislative side, HB 2641 (originally passing the House 109-34 on February 19, 2026) was signed by Governor Mike Kehoe on April 23, 2026 as the Intoxicating Cannabinoid Control Act. Effective November 12, 2026 (concurrent with federal Section 781), it aligns state hemp definitions with federal law and restricts intoxicating hemp sales to state-licensed marijuana dispensaries. A contested provision provides a beverage carve-out — but only as a contingency if Congress delays the federal ban. Missouri is one of the states most exposed to a state-federal double-cliff on November 12, 2026.


Discover more from Cannabis.Wine

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

This state summary has not yet been reviewed by counsel. Verify with your attorney before making commercial decisions.