cannabis.wine / intel

Rhode Island

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

Rhode Island runs one of the country's tightest state-level hemp beverage frameworks — one that ironically opened the market in August 2024 only to face active efforts to constrict it. Under 230-RICR-80-10-1 (Rhode Island's industrial hemp rules, first implemented August 2024), consumable hemp products are capped at 1mg total THC per serving, 5mg total THC per package, and 0.3% total THC on a dry-weight basis. Total THC includes THCA and all isomers and derivatives — a definition tighter than the underlying Hemp Growth Act (RIGL Chapter 2-26). Hemp-derived Delta-9 beverages became lawful at ~120 licensed retailers (liquor stores, restaurants, bars, vape shops) in August 2024. The state paused new hemp retailer licenses in July 2025 pending a study. In its March 1, 2026 report to the General Assembly, the Cannabis Control Commission (CCC) formally recommended: (1) banning THC drink sales at venues with liquor licenses (bars/restaurants), (2) restructuring taxes to apply the cannabis tax structure (10% total vs current 7% sales tax), (3) requiring RIDOH-certified lab testing to cannabis-equivalent standards, and (4) establishing purchase limits. SB 3215 (April 2026) would formalize much of this framework. Adult-use cannabis is legal under the Rhode Island Cannabis Act (RIGL Chapter 21-28.11, 2022) through CCC-licensed dispensaries.

Status
Restrictions
DTC shipping
Restricted — hemp beverage products must meet the tight 1mg/serving and 5mg/package caps; converting CBD into delta-9 THC or any other cannabinoid prohibited unless approved by DBR; national hemp beverage brands with 2.5-10mg per can cannot lawfully be shipped to Rhode Island addresses under 230-RICR-80-10-1; compliant low-mg products from Rhode Island-based producers (Nice Beverage Co. and others) available; adult-use cannabis products cannot cross state lines
Serving cap
1 mg total THC per serving for consumable hemp products (230-RICR-80-10-1); adult-use cannabis at CCC-licensed dispensaries follows separate cannabis-equivalent standards
Container cap
5 mg total THC per package for consumable hemp products (230-RICR-80-10-1); beverages implicitly capped at 5mg per container (single-serving format); 0.3% total THC dry-weight cap; total THC includes THCA and all isomers and derivatives
Age gate
21+ for consumable hemp products at CCC-licensed retailers under 230-RICR-80-10-1; server training required for hemp beverage sales; 21+ for adult-use cannabis at CCC dispensaries; medical cannabis patients 18+ (with parental consent for minors with qualifying conditions)
License
CCC hemp retailer/distributor license required for consumable hemp sales (paused July 2025 for on-site consumption venues); CCC cannabis dispensary licenses for adult-use and medical (separate framework); SB 3215 (pending) would require Class B liquor license for retail sale of hemp beverages and Class A/B liquor wholesale license for distribution
Regulator
Rhode Island Cannabis Control Commission (CCC) — administers hemp under 230-RICR-80-10-1 and adult-use/medical cannabis under Cannabis Act (RIGL Chapter 21-28.11); authority transferred from Rhode Island Department of Business Regulation (DBR) via FY2026 budget effective July 1, 2025; Rhode Island Department of Health (RIDOH) — testing/certification oversight; Rhode Island Department of Revenue — tax administration; Rhode Island Department of Business Regulation (DBR) — legacy hemp oversight (pre-transfer)
Current rule effective
August 1, 2024
Next known change — in 117 days
November 12, 2026 — Federal P.L. 119-37 § 781 takes effect. Rhode Island's 5mg per-package cap under 230-RICR-80-10-1 is 12.5× tighter than Section 781's 0.4mg per-container ceiling — so RI beverage math actually gets tighter under federal law. RI CCC signaled it 'intends to draft updates to the hemp regulations in 2026, but recent federal activity and future actions remain uncertain, which may delay the regulatory drafting to early 2027.' Expect RI to hold its 1mg/serving and 5mg/package caps at the state level but conform to Section 781's 0.4mg federal ceiling for imported products, or add a state ceiling matching the federal one.
Federal alignment (P.L. 119-37 § 781)
Aligned with federal Rhode Island's 1mg/serving and 5mg/package caps under 230-RICR-80-10-1 are among the tightest state-level frameworks in the country. Section 781's incoming 0.4mg total-THC per-container federal ceiling is actually 12.5× TIGHTER than Rhode Island's 5mg per-package cap — meaning that even RI-compliant products will fall outside the federal hemp definition on November 12, 2026 unless the CCC updates its rules. CCC has signaled 'the Commission intends to draft updates to the hemp regulations in 2026, however, recent federal activity and future actions remain uncertain, which may delay the regulatory drafting to early 2027.' Expect the CCC to eventually harmonize with the federal 0.4mg ceiling, further shrinking the hemp lane. The pending ban on hemp drinks at liquor-licensed venues (per March 2026 CCC recommendation) will further constrict the retail channel if the General Assembly codifies it.

Retail channels

  • CCC-licensed hemp retailers (~120 as of March 2026): liquor stores, restaurants, bars, vape shops selling compliant hemp beverages at ≤1mg per serving and ≤5mg per package; new licenses paused July 2025
  • CCC-licensed adult-use cannabis dispensaries: cannabis-derived products at higher potencies for adults 21+; ~7 operating dispensaries statewide with limited retail rollout
  • CCC-licensed medical cannabis dispensaries: patient program under Compassionate Use Act
  • Bars and restaurants with liquor licenses: currently allowed to sell hemp beverages; CCC March 2026 report recommends General Assembly codify a BAN on such sales; SB 3215 formalizes framework
  • Hemp beverages at 5-10mg per can (national brands): NOT LAWFUL under 5mg per-package cap
  • Inhalable hemp products (vapes, flower): treated as consumable products under 230-RICR-80-10-1 with same 1mg serving / 5mg package caps — effectively closes inhalable hemp channel
  • Delta-8, delta-10 converted from CBD: PROHIBITED without DBR approval
  • Online DTC into Rhode Island: only products meeting the 1mg/5mg caps can lawfully ship; national brands with higher potencies cannot
  • Rhode Island-based producers (Nice Beverage Co. and others): compliant low-mg formulations for RI market

Statutes & bills cited

  • R.I. Gen. Laws Chapter 2-26 (Hemp Growth Act) — Rhode Island's foundational hemp cultivation statute; delta-9 THC 0.3% dry-weight standard
  • 230-RICR-80-10-1 — Rhode Island's industrial hemp rules; total-THC standard capping consumable hemp at 1mg per serving, 5mg per package, 0.3% dry weight; effective August 2024; inhalable products treated as consumable; converting CBD into delta-9 THC or other cannabinoids prohibited unless approved by DBR
  • R.I. Gen. Laws Chapter 21-28.11 — Rhode Island Cannabis Act of 2022; adult-use marijuana framework administered by CCC
  • FY2026 Rhode Island Budget (effective July 1, 2025) — transferred hemp oversight from DBR to CCC; gave CCC license suspension authority; commissioned study of hemp beverage regulation
  • RI General Assembly Companion Resolutions (June 2025) — tasked CCC with hemp beverage recommendations due March 1, 2026
  • CCC Report to General Assembly (March 1, 2026) — 11-page report recommending: ban on THC drink sales at liquor-licensed venues; RIDOH-certified testing; cannabis tax structure application; purchase limits
  • SB 3215 (April 2026) — Senate bill establishing formal hemp beverage framework; distribution authority limited to Class A/B liquor wholesalers; Class B liquor license required for retail sale; server training required consistent with alcohol server training; codifies CCC recommendations
  • HB 6270 / Slater bill (2025) — earlier legislative attempts to regulate or restrict hemp beverage sales; superseded by 2026 session activity
  • CCC Moratorium (July 2025) — paused new hemp retailer licenses for businesses allowing on-site consumption of alcohol

Rhode Island’s hemp beverage story is a study in fast regulatory evolution — the state opened its hemp Delta-9 market in August 2024 under 230-RICR-80-10-1 with what was then one of the country’s tightest product frameworks, watched approximately 120 retailers (liquor stores, restaurants, bars, vape shops) build a real market over the following year, then hit the brakes in mid-2025 and spent 2026 debating whether to constrict further. The operative rule under 230-RICR-80-10-1 caps consumable hemp products at 1mg total THC per serving, 5mg total THC per package, and 0.3% total THC on a dry-weight basis. Total THC is defined to include THCA together with all isomers and derivatives — a definition tighter than the underlying Rhode Island Hemp Growth Act at RIGL Chapter 2-26, which used a delta-9-only test. Under the rules, inhalable products are treated as consumable products (subject to the same caps, effectively closing the inhalable hemp channel), and converting CBD into delta-9 THC or any other cannabinoid is prohibited unless approved by the Department of Business Regulation (DBR). Rhode Island runs parallel adult-use and medical cannabis programs under the Rhode Island Cannabis Act of 2022 (RIGL Chapter 21-28.11), administered by the Cannabis Control Commission (CCC). Roughly 7 adult-use dispensaries operate statewide, with a broader retail rollout continuing through 2026. The FY2026 Rhode Island budget (effective July 1, 2025) transferred hemp oversight from DBR to the CCC and gave the CCC license suspension authority — powers the CCC exercised almost immediately. On July 18, 2025, the CCC voted unanimously to pause new hemp retailer licenses for businesses that allow on-site consumption of alcohol, freezing 10 pending applications. Companion resolutions from the June 2025 General Assembly session had tasked the CCC with preparing recommendations on hemp beverage regulation by March 1, 2026. The CCC held a public webinar on February 2, 2026 to gather feedback on draft recommendations. Rhode Island Hospitality Association (led by CEO Farouk Rajab) and industry representatives voiced strong opposition to a proposed ban on hemp beverages at liquor-licensed venues, but the CCC’s final 11-page report to the General Assembly on March 1, 2026 formally recommended: (1) banning THC drink sales at venues with liquor licenses (bars and restaurants); (2) restructuring taxes to apply the cannabis tax structure — 7% sales tax + 3% local cannabis excise tax vs the current 7% sales tax only; (3) requiring RIDOH-certified lab testing to cannabis-equivalent standards including pesticides, heavy metals, residual solvents, cannabinoid profiles, and microcontaminants; and (4) establishing purchase limits per consumer per transaction. On March 17, 2026, the CCC formally backed the ban recommendation in its public meeting. CCC Chief of Policy Carla Aveledo articulated the position: ‘All retailers selling intoxicating hemp products should be held to similar high safety standards as cannabis retailers.’ The Rhode Island Hospitality Association’s Rajab called the recommendation an ‘overreach’ and pointed to Minnesota’s model of on-site consumption endorsements, but even Minnesota’s Office of Cannabis Management (spokesperson Jim Walker) told Rhode Island Current that federal potency restrictions taking effect November 2026 threw the whole national industry through a loop. In April 2026, Sen. Slater and others introduced SB 3215, which would formalize much of the CCC framework: distribution authority limited to holders of wholesale Class A/B liquor licenses; retail sale requiring Class B liquor license; server training consistent with alcohol server training under RIGL § 3-7-6.1; RIDOH-certified testing; excise tax structure. For the federal cliff on November 12, 2026, Rhode Island faces an unusual situation. Its 1mg/serving and 5mg/package caps under 230-RICR-80-10-1 are among the country’s tightest, but Section 781’s incoming 0.4mg per-container federal ceiling is actually 12.5× TIGHTER than Rhode Island’s 5mg per-package cap. That means even fully RI-compliant hemp products will fall outside the federal hemp definition on November 12, 2026 unless CCC updates its rules to harmonize. CCC’s Aveledo has publicly acknowledged: ‘The Commission intends to draft updates to the hemp regulations in 2026, however, recent federal activity and future actions remain uncertain, which may delay the regulatory drafting to early 2027 to ensure our framework is fully informed and strategically aligned.’ Expect CCC to eventually add a 0.4mg per-container ceiling matching the federal ceiling, further shrinking the hemp lane. Combined with the likely liquor-license ban if the General Assembly codifies the March 2026 CCC recommendation, the Rhode Island hemp beverage market will contract sharply through 2026-2027.


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