North Carolina
North Carolina is one of the most permissive hemp markets currently — no state age limit, no state total-THC test, no state retail license required — but that's about to change. HB 328 conference report passed the Senate 37-6 on July 2, 2026 and awaits a House vote the week of July 27. If enacted, an age-21 rule takes effect July 15, 2026 and a total-THC 0.4mg/container standard on November 12, 2026 (mirroring federal). NC Session Law 2022-32 (SB 455) made permanent the hemp cannabinoid carve-out from the controlled substances schedule. Industry: 16,000+ jobs, $3.2B annual revenue per Whitney Economics.
Retail channels
- General retail: unlicensed at state level — smoke shops, dispensaries, convenience stores, grocery, online
- Hemp beverages: sold in package stores, beer/wine retailers, and specialty hemp channels
- Post-HB 328: ALE-licensed retailers only; verification for anyone appearing under 30
- THCA flower: currently legal (SB 455); would become Schedule VI controlled substance under HB 328 if it fails total-THC test
Statutes & bills cited
- NC Session Law 2022-32 (SB 455) — codified hemp carve-out at G.S. 90-94
- G.S. 90-94 — Controlled Substances Act (hemp exclusion)
- HB 328 (2025-2026) — Hemp-Derived Consumable Products Act; conference report passed Senate 37-6 on July 2, 2026; awaits House vote week of July 27, 2026
- SB 328 (2025-2026) — narrower age-21 only bill; passed Senate 42-0, House 106-1, parked in committee
- HB 607 (2025) — proposed Chapter 18D regulatory framework; retains 0.3% delta-9 standard
- HB 680 — 'Protect Children from Cannabis Act'; routes through ABC Commission
- SB 265 — alternative regulatory framework (industry-preferred)
- SB 59 — companion age-21 restriction with kratom coverage
North Carolina has been an unusually permissive market for hemp-derived cannabinoids since Session Law 2022-32 (SB 455) codified the hemp carve-out from the state’s controlled substances schedule at G.S. 90-94. That statute defined hemp using the federal Farm Bill’s delta-9-only standard (0.3% dry weight), established no per-serving milligram cap, imposed no state age requirement, and did not require any state-level retailer license. As a result, an approximately $3.2 billion hemp industry emerged across the state (Whitney Economics: 16,000+ jobs, $4.4B total economic impact), with THCA flower, delta-8 products, delta-9 gummies, HHC, and hemp beverages sold widely at smoke shops, dispensaries, grocery stores, and online. The 2025-2026 legislative session produced at least six competing hemp regulatory proposals. HB 328 emerged as the vehicle — but the House and Senate passed substantially different versions, and the bill effectively died on April 21, 2026 when the House voted 95-18 not to concur with Senate changes. It returned as a conference report that passed the Senate 37-6 on July 2, 2026 and awaits House vote the week of July 27. If enacted, HB 328 creates new Chapter 18D of the General Statutes: age-21 sale and possession effective July 15, 2026, and a redefinition of hemp effective November 12, 2026 that mirrors federal Section 781 (total-THC standard, 0.4mg/container cap, synthetic and chemically-converted cannabinoids excluded). Licensing through the Alcohol Law Enforcement (ALE) Division: $500 retail, $25,000 manufacturer application fees. Prohibited product violations post-November 12 become Schedule VI controlled substances offenses. Alternative approaches remain in play — SB 265 (industry-preferred, ABC Commission oversight), SB 59 (age-21 with kratom), and SB 328 (narrow age-21 restriction) — but HB 328 is the vehicle most likely to reach Governor Stein’s desk. Ward and Smith notes an important quirk: if federal Section 781 is later repealed or delayed, HB 328 would NOT automatically re-align state law, leaving NC potentially stricter than federal.
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Sources
- LegalClarity — NC hemp bill status and penalties ↗
- Raleigh Dispensaries — NC Hemp Law 2026 ↗
- Ward and Smith — NC hemp overhaul analysis ↗
- Cannabis Regulations AI — NC THCA 2026 ↗
- WSPA — NC Senate approves HB 328 ↗
- ABC11 — NC hemp bill through legislature ↗
- BillTrack50 — NC S328 Age 21 Hemp-Derived Consumables ↗
This state summary has not yet been reviewed by counsel. Verify with your attorney before making commercial decisions.