cannabis.wine / intel

Virginia

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

Virginia enforces one of the strictest hemp caps in the country. State law limits hemp products to 2mg total THC per package — 5x more permissive than the incoming federal 0.4mg cap, but prohibitive for the standard 3-5mg hemp beverage category. SB 543 (signed by Gov. Spanberger, 2026) transfers hemp regulation from VDACS to the Cannabis Control Authority (CCA) in August 2026, eliminates the 25:1 CBD:THC ratio exception effective August 15, 2026, and expands CCA enforcement authority. Federal court has already upheld Virginia's stricter regulatory approach against Farm Bill preemption challenges. Retail marijuana market launches July 1, 2027 (per HB 30).

Status
Blocked
DTC shipping
Restricted — Virginia has actively enforced against DTC hemp shipments exceeding state limits; federal court upheld VA's approach
Serving cap
N/A (per-package limit is the operative test)
Container cap
2mg total THC per package (effective through Aug 15, 2026 under existing rules; codified without 25:1 ratio exception effective Aug 15, 2026)
Age gate
21+ (customary; codified in cannabis-related statutes)
License
Required — CCA licensing structure being built out; hemp regulatory authority transfers to CCA August 2026; retail cannabis licensing applications begin July 2026
Regulator
Virginia Cannabis Control Authority (CCA) — hemp regulation from August 2026 (previously VDACS); Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control Authority (ABC) — illicit market enforcement; VDACS through August 2026
Current rule effective
July 1, 2023
Next known change — in 28 days
August 15, 2026 — The 25:1 CBD:THC ratio exception is eliminated. Products with more than 2mg total THC per package can no longer be sold as hemp in Virginia. Hemp regulation transfers from VDACS to CCA. Federal P.L. 119-37 § 781 follows on November 12, 2026 (further tightening).
Federal alignment (P.L. 119-37 § 781)
Looser than federal Virginia's 2mg total THC per package cap is 5x the federal 0.4mg cap — but is dramatically stricter than most state frameworks (5-10mg standards). VA is stricter than most states, looser than federal. Federal Nov 12 cliff will further tighten the market. Federal court in 2025 upheld VA regulations against 2018 Farm Bill preemption challenge.

Retail channels

  • General retail: hemp products at or below 2mg total THC per package permitted
  • Beverages above 2mg per package: PROHIBITED as hemp
  • Vape shops, smoke shops, CBD retailers: most intoxicating hemp SKUs failing 2mg cap
  • Medical cannabis: through Virginia's pharmaceutical processors (limited access)
  • Retail marijuana (from July 1, 2027): CCA-licensed adult-use dispensaries — 350 license cap

Statutes & bills cited

  • SB 543 (2026) — signed by Gov. Spanberger, 2026; enforcement provisions effective November 1, 2026
  • HB 30 (2026 budget) — establishes retail cannabis market effective July 1, 2027
  • Virginia Cannabis Control Act — codifies CCA authority
  • Va. Code Ann. § 3.2-4112 et seq. — industrial hemp
  • Va. Code Ann. § 4.1-600 et seq. — Cannabis Control Act
  • Va. Consumer Protection Act — SB 543 civil enforcement pathway
  • Va. Fraud Against Taxpayers Act — SB 543 civil action authority
  • HB 391 (2026) — medical cannabis improvements (unanimous 139-0)

Virginia’s hemp beverage framework is defined by one number: 2 milligrams of total THC per package. That cap has been in place since 2023 (Va. Code Ann. § 3.2-4112 as amended), and until recently a 25:1 CBD:THC ratio exception allowed products with more than 2mg THC if they contained 25 parts CBD for every 1 part THC. That exception is eliminated effective August 15, 2026 under SB 543 and companion budget legislation (HB 30), both signed by Governor Abigail Spanberger in mid-2026. The consequence: essentially every commercial hemp beverage at the standard 3-5mg dose is prohibited from sale as hemp in Virginia. This has been true structurally since 2023, but ambiguity around the ratio provision preserved some pathways; those close in August. SB 543 also transfers hemp regulatory authority from the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (VDACS) to the Virginia Cannabis Control Authority (CCA) in August 2026, expands CCA enforcement powers (cease-and-desist orders, civil penalties, unlicensed operator enforcement), creates a Virginia Fraud Against Taxpayers Act civil action, and makes selling non-compliant intoxicating hemp a prohibited practice under the Virginia Consumer Protection Act. On the marijuana side, HB 30 authorizes Virginia’s regulated retail cannabis market beginning July 1, 2027 — a market that former Governor Youngkin blocked repeatedly with vetoes (2024, 2025). Applications for cannabis business permits begin July 2026 with a 350-license cap. Enforcement responsibilities are split between CCA (licensed market) and ABC (illicit market) with an eventual merger into the ‘Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Cannabis Control Authority’ by 2028. Notably, a federal court upheld Virginia’s stricter-than-Farm-Bill hemp regulations in January 2025, rejecting preemption arguments — meaning Virginia’s approach is on solid legal footing regardless of federal Section 781 timing. For hemp beverage operators, Virginia is effectively closed to any standard-dose product; the state framework will further tighten in August, and federal alignment comes November 12.


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