Oregon
Oregon operates a comprehensive dual-channel framework. HB 3000 (2021) drew a hard line: hemp items with ≥0.5mg total THC per serving are treated as adult-use cannabis and can be sold only through OLCC-licensed marijuana dispensaries; items below that threshold may sell in general retail. Adult-use hemp beverages sold outside the dispensary system are capped at 2mg total delta-9 THC per serving and 20mg per container under OAR 845-026-0410. Artificially derived cannabinoids (delta-8, HHC, THC-O, synthesized delta-9) are prohibited outside the OLCC marijuana channel. HB 4121 (2024) created the OLCC Hemp Registry, effective January 1, 2026 with active enforcement beginning June 1, 2026 — every cannabinoid hemp product sold to Oregon consumers must be registered. ODA hemp vendor site licenses ($100/year) required for retailers. Recreational marijuana is legal 21+ under Measure 91 (2014).
Retail channels
- OLCC-licensed marijuana retailers: any hemp or cannabis product ≥0.5mg total THC per serving; only channel for artificially derived cannabinoids that receive OLCC approval
- ODA-licensed hemp vendor sites (general retail): hemp items <0.5mg total THC per serving, and adult-use hemp beverages ≤2mg/serving and ≤20mg/container to consumers 21+
- Alcohol licensees and liquor agents: may sell compliant hemp-derived beverages if they hold an ODA hemp vendor license; may NOT sell marijuana-derived beverages
- State liquor stores (via liquor agents): may sell compliant hemp beverages with proper licensing
- Non-alcoholic hemp-derived beverages only (alcoholic hemp beverages generally prohibited)
- Delta-8, HHC, THC-O, and other artificially derived cannabinoids: prohibited outside OLCC marijuana channel
- OLCC Hemp Registry symbol (Blue Hemp Symbol) or ASTM D8441 Intoxicating Cannabis Product Symbol required on labels, plus publicly accessible COA URL
Statutes & bills cited
- ORS Chapter 571 — Oregon Industrial Hemp Act (ODA cultivation authority)
- ORS Chapter 475C — Cannabis Regulation Act (OLCC adult-use authority)
- Measure 91 (2014) — adult-use cannabis legalization
- HB 3000 (2021) — intoxicating hemp/marijuana boundary; artificially derived cannabinoid prohibition; 0.5mg total THC per-serving threshold for adult-use classification
- HB 4121 (2024) — Oregon Hemp Registry; effective January 1, 2026; enforcement begins June 1, 2026
- OAR 845-026-0400 through -0410 — OLCC potency limits (2mg/serving, 20mg/container for adult-use hemp beverages; 100mg/container for tinctures)
- OAR 845-026-0415 — narrow OLCC approval pathway for artificially derived cannabinoids (requires FDA approval; no product currently qualifies)
- OAR 603-048-0175 — ODA hemp vendor site license ($100/year per site; effective July 1, 2024)
- OAR 845-026-6000 through -6120 — Hemp Registry implementation rules
Oregon has spent the past four years building what is arguably the most technically sophisticated state framework for hemp-derived beverages in the country — one that industry observers frequently describe as a preview of what post-Section 781 state regulation could look like nationally. HB 3000 (2021) established the foundational architecture: any hemp item containing 0.5mg or more of total THC per serving is treated as an adult-use cannabis product and may be sold only through OLCC-licensed marijuana retailers under ORS Chapter 475C; items below that threshold may be sold at general retail. Artificially derived cannabinoids — delta-8, HHC, THC-O, synthesized delta-9, and synthesized CBN — are prohibited outside the OLCC marijuana channel, with a narrow OLCC approval pathway under OAR 845-026-0415 requiring FDA safety approval that no commercial delta-8 or HHC product has ever met. The Oregon Department of Agriculture (ODA) applies a total-THC test at cultivation (THCA × 0.877 + delta-9 ≤ 0.3% dry weight), so the loophole that lets THCA flower travel elsewhere as ‘hemp’ does not work in Oregon. For adult-use hemp beverages sold outside the dispensary system, OAR 845-026-0410 caps products at 2mg total delta-9 THC per serving and 20mg per container, with a 10% testing tolerance. Hemp tinctures cap at 100mg per container. Retailers selling any cannabinoid hemp products must hold an ODA Hemp Vendor Site License ($100/year per site) under OAR 603-048-0175, effective July 1, 2024. HB 4121 (2024) then added the OLCC Hemp Registry, which took effect January 1, 2026 with active enforcement beginning June 1, 2026: every cannabinoid hemp product sold to Oregon consumers — online or brick-and-mortar — must be registered with OLCC and bear either the ASTM International Intoxicating Cannabis Product Symbol (D8441) or OLCC’s Blue Hemp Symbol along with a publicly accessible COA URL. Alcohol licensees and liquor agents (including state liquor stores) may sell compliant non-alcoholic hemp beverages if they hold a hemp vendor license, but may not sell marijuana-derived beverages or mix hemp into cocktails. Alcoholic hemp beverages are generally prohibited. The OLCC bulletin dated May 28, 2026 confirmed enforcement of the Hemp Registry rules starting June 1, 2026. AG Dan Rayfield has not joined the NAAG multi-state letter, and Oregon has not pushed for federal action — the state’s posture is that its framework is already handling the issues Section 781 targets. For the federal cliff on November 12, 2026, Oregon is one of the least-disrupted major markets philosophically: total-THC testing is already in place, artificially derived cannabinoids are already banned, product registration is already in place, and 21+ dispensary routing for higher-potency products is already the norm. The practical challenge is the numeric cap: Oregon’s 20mg/container adult-use hemp beverage cap still exceeds the federal 0.4mg/container ceiling by 50x, so most current adult-use Oregon SKUs will require reformulation even though the compliance infrastructure around them is already federal-aligned. Sens. Wyden and Merkley (both D-OR) introduced the Cannabinoid Safety and Regulation Act in December 2025, which would replace Section 781 with a federal framework allowing 5mg/serving and 50mg/container for edibles — legislation drafted partly with Oregon’s model in mind.
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Sources
- OLCC — Hemp-Derived Beverage Guidance (official) ↗
- OLCC — Hemp Retailer Fact Sheet (OAR 845-026-0400 et seq.) ↗
- OLCC — Hemp Registry Enforcement Bulletin (May 2026) ↗
- Cannabis Regulations AI — Oregon Delta-9 2026 ↗
- ATLRx — Oregon THC beverage compliance 2026 ↗
- Chow420 — Oregon Hemp Laws & OLCC Registry ↗
- ATLRx — Oregon CBD/HB 4121 Registry 2026 ↗
- Oregon State Cannabis — HB 3000 and OLCC rules ↗
- BD Logistics — Oregon 2026 cannabinoid update ↗
This state summary has not yet been reviewed by counsel. Verify with your attorney before making commercial decisions.