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North Dakota

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

North Dakota operates one of the country's most restrictive hemp frameworks — effectively closed to intoxicating hemp beverages regardless of source. N.D. Cent. Code chapter 4.1-18.1 defines industrial hemp using a total-THC calculation (delta-9 + 0.877 × THCA) capped at 0.3% dry weight, with cultivation administered by the North Dakota Department of Agriculture. HB 1045 (2021) redefined THC to include all structural, optical, and geometric isomers as controlled substances, and prohibited isomerization of CBD into THC — effectively closing the delta-8 loophole. SB 2096 (2023, signed by Gov. Burgum April 24, 2023) went further, excluding delta-8 THC products from the statutory hemp definition entirely. The practical result: high-mg hemp Delta-9 beverages and gummies sold nationally cannot lawfully be sold or shipped into North Dakota. Only low-mg tinctures, topicals, and CBD products meeting the 0.3% total-THC cap remain lawful at retail. Medical cannabis operates through licensed dispensaries under the Compassionate Care Act (Measure 5, 2016), and HB 1203 (2025, effective August 1, 2025) added lozenge edibles capped at 5mg per serving and 50mg per package with a 500mg possession limit. Adult-use has been rejected by voters three times (2018, 2022, 2024). The AG's office has settled enforcement cases against out-of-state operators shipping intoxicating hemp into North Dakota.

Status
Blocked
DTC shipping
Effectively prohibited for high-mg hemp Delta-9 beverages and gummies — products must meet ND's total-THC calculation at ≤0.3% dry weight; national hemp brands with 5-10mg per can/gummy cannot lawfully be shipped to ND addresses; AG's office has settled enforcement cases against out-of-state operators shipping intoxicating hemp into ND; low-mg tinctures and topicals meeting the cap remain shippable; medical cannabis delivery not authorized
Serving cap
None for hemp products at retail — hemp products must meet 0.3% total-THC dry-weight cap, which effectively eliminates high-mg products; medical cannabis lozenges under HB 1203: 5mg per serving
Container cap
0.3% total-THC dry-weight cap effectively caps hemp products at very low mg per container in practical terms; medical cannabis lozenges under HB 1203: 50mg per package; 500mg total possession limit on cannabinoid edibles per medical patient
Age gate
21+ for medical cannabis (18+ with qualifying condition and physician recommendation, with parental consent for minors); no adult-use program; hemp product age gate not statutorily specified but 21+ operational floor widely observed at retail
License
USDA hemp producer license required for cultivation; NDDA hemp cultivation registration under USDA-approved plan; no state-level hemp retail license — the 0.3% total-THC dry-weight cap functions as effective closure of the intoxicating hemp retail channel; NDDHHS medical cannabis dispensary licensing (separate framework)
Regulator
North Dakota Department of Agriculture (NDDA) — administers industrial hemp cultivation program under N.D. Cent. Code chapter 4.1-18.1 with USDA-approved plan; Agriculture Commissioner has discretion to set legal THC limits; North Dakota Department of Health and Human Services (NDDHHS) — administers Compassionate Care Act medical marijuana program; North Dakota Attorney General — enforcement against out-of-state operators shipping intoxicating hemp; NDDHHS Division of Cannabis Regulation — additional oversight
Current rule effective
April 24, 2023
Next known change — in 117 days
November 12, 2026 — Federal P.L. 119-37 § 781 takes effect. North Dakota already applies a total-THC calculation and has excluded all THC isomers from the hemp definition, so Section 781 largely reinforces the existing enforcement posture. Federal 0.4mg per-container ceiling is tighter than ND's 0.3% dry-weight standard for low-mg products but does not open any pathway for high-mg beverages, which remain unlawful. Practical disruption for ND operators is nil because ND is already closed.
Federal alignment (P.L. 119-37 § 781)
Aligned with federal North Dakota is one of the country's cleanest state-level alignments with Section 781. The state's total-THC calculation, exclusion of THC isomers, and prohibition on isomerization directly parallel Section 781's definitional shift. Section 781's 0.4mg per-container federal ceiling is tighter than ND's 0.3% dry-weight standard for low-mg products but does not open any new pathway for high-mg beverages. Practical disruption for ND operators is nil because ND is already closed. Expect ND to remain closed post-cliff unless the 2027 or 2029 legislative sessions add a beverage-specific carve-out — no such proposal is currently in play.

Retail channels

  • NDDA-registered hemp cultivators and processors: compliant low-mg hemp products (tinctures, topicals, CBD) under 0.3% total-THC
  • NDDHHS-licensed medical cannabis dispensaries: patient program products including HB 1203 lozenges (5mg/serving, 50mg/package)
  • General retail (grocery, convenience, wellness, CBD stores): compliant low-mg CBD and hemp products only; no high-mg hemp Delta-9 beverages or gummies
  • Hemp Delta-9 beverages at typical 2.5-10mg per can: NOT LAWFUL at ND retail under 0.3% total-THC math
  • Delta-8, delta-10, HHC, THC-O: PROHIBITED under HB 1045 (2021) and SB 2096 (2023)
  • THCA flower and high-THCA products: NOT LAWFUL under total-THC calculation
  • Online DTC of high-mg hemp products into ND: NOT LAWFUL; AG enforcement history against out-of-state shippers
  • Adult-use cannabis: NONE — rejected by voters in 2018, 2022, and 2024

Statutes & bills cited

  • N.D. Cent. Code ch. 4.1-18.1 — Industrial Hemp; defines hemp using total-THC calculation ((THCA × 0.877) + delta-9 THC) at ≤0.3% dry weight; establishes NDDA cultivation program
  • N.D. Cent. Code § 4.1-18.1-01 — Industrial hemp definitions
  • HB 1045 (2021) — signed by Gov. Doug Burgum; amended chapter 4.1-18.1 to treat all structural, optical, and geometric isomers of THC as controlled substances; prohibits isomerization of CBD into THC; codifies Agriculture Commissioner's discretion to set legal THC limits
  • SB 2096 (2023) — signed by Gov. Burgum April 24, 2023; excluded delta-8 THC products from statutory hemp definition entirely; clarified retail sale restrictions
  • Measure 5 (2016) — voter-approved Compassionate Care Act; established medical cannabis program administered by NDDHHS
  • HB 1203 (2025) — signed by Gov. Kelly Armstrong; effective August 1, 2025; added lozenge edibles to medical cannabis program capped at 5mg THC per serving and 50mg per package; 500mg THC possession limit on cannabinoid edibles
  • Adult-use ballot measures rejected: Initiated Statutory Measure No. 3 (2018), Initiated Statutory Measure No. 2 (2022), Initiated Statutory Measure No. 5 (2024) — all failed at the polls

North Dakota is one of the country’s most restrictive hemp markets, and it got there through legislative discipline: three separate bills (HB 1045 in 2021, SB 2096 in 2023, and HB 1203 in 2025) systematically closed loopholes that let intoxicating hemp products reach retail elsewhere. The Nebraska Hemp Farming Act at N.D. Cent. Code chapter 4.1-18.1 defines industrial hemp using a total-THC calculation from the start — total THC equals (THCA × 0.877) + delta-9 THC, capped at 0.3% on a dry-weight basis. Cultivation is administered by the North Dakota Department of Agriculture (NDDA) under a USDA-approved plan, with the Agriculture Commissioner holding statutory discretion to set legal THC limits in hemp plants. The 67th Legislative Assembly passed HB 1045 in 2021 (signed by Gov. Doug Burgum), which explicitly amended chapter 4.1-18.1 to treat all structural, optical, and geometric isomers of THC — including delta-8 and delta-10 — as controlled substances, and to prohibit isomerization of CBD into THC. That single act closed the delta-8 loophole years before most states. The 68th Legislative Assembly tightened further with SB 2096, signed by Gov. Burgum April 24, 2023, which excluded delta-8 THC products from the statutory hemp definition entirely and clarified retail sale restrictions. NDDA Agriculture Commissioner Doug Goehring articulated the legislative intent clearly at the time: ‘The intent of the 2014 and 2018 Farm Bills that legalized hemp was not to create loopholes for psychotropic products. These processes are synthetically creating a drug that will cause the user to get high.’ The practical result is a hemp retail market limited to genuinely non-intoxicating CBD products, low-mg tinctures, and topicals that pass the total-THC math. High-mg hemp Delta-9 beverages, gummies, and any product containing THCA that decarboxylates into intoxicating delta-9 THC when heated all fail the state’s compliance test. National hemp brands with 2.5-10mg per can cannot lawfully ship to North Dakota addresses, and the AG’s office has settled enforcement cases against out-of-state operators including a 2023 action against a major delta-8 manufacturer. Medical cannabis operates through NDDHHS-licensed dispensaries under the Compassionate Care Act (voter-approved Measure 5, 2016). HB 1203 (2025), signed by Gov. Kelly Armstrong and effective August 1, 2025, added lozenge edibles to the medical program capped at 5mg THC per serving and 50mg per package, with a 500mg THC possession limit on cannabinoid edibles per patient. Other food and beverage formats remain outside the medical program. Adult-use cannabis has been rejected three times at the polls: Initiated Statutory Measure No. 3 in 2018 (would have legalized personal use for adults 21+), Initiated Statutory Measure No. 2 in 2022 (would have allowed adults 21+ to possess 1 oz and grow 3 plants), and Initiated Statutory Measure No. 5 in 2024. Voter preference for continued prohibition appears settled. For the federal cliff on November 12, 2026, North Dakota is unusual in that Section 781 largely does nothing to the operative regulatory picture — ND is already closed. Section 781’s total-THC standard, THCA inclusion, and synthetic cannabinoid exclusion all parallel ND’s existing framework. The federal 0.4mg per-container ceiling is tighter than ND’s 0.3% dry-weight standard for very low-mg products but does not open any new pathway for the high-mg beverages that dominate the national market. Expect ND to remain closed post-cliff, with the possibility of a beverage-specific carve-out in a future session only if state legislators see revenue justification — no such proposal is currently in play, and the state’s demonstrated legislative preference is systematic tightening rather than carve-outs.


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