Tennessee
Tennessee transferred all hemp-derived cannabinoid product (HDCP) oversight from the Department of Agriculture (TDA) to the Alcoholic Beverage Commission (TABC) effective January 1, 2026 under Public Chapter 526. The new framework adopts a total-THC ≤0.3% standard and explicitly bans delta-8, delta-10, HHC, and THCP as synthetic cannabinoids. Compliant beverages remain legal at 21+ retail through a three-tier TABC licensing system, but online sales are prohibited — face-to-face brick-and-mortar only. Legacy TDA licenses continue under settlement through June 30, 2026.
Retail channels
- TABC-licensed retailers: sole channel after June 30, 2026
- TDA legacy licensees: permitted through June 30, 2026 under settlement
- On-premises consumption at TABC alcohol licensees: PERMITTED (unusual — most states prohibit this)
- Online / mail-order: prohibited statewide
- Prohibited products regardless of channel: delta-8, delta-10, HHC, THCP (classified as synthetic cannabinoids under PC 526)
Statutes & bills cited
- Public Chapter 526, 2025 (HB 1376 / SB 1413) — TABC transition, signed May 21, 2025, effective Jan 1, 2026
- Public Chapter 423, 2023 (SB 378 / HB 403) — original TDA framework
- Tenn. Code Ann. §§43-27-201 through 43-27-211 — HDCP definitions and licensing (2023 framework)
- Tenn. Code Ann. Title 57, Chapter 7 — new TABC framework
- Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs. Chapters 0080-10-02 and 0080-10-03 — TDA rules (legacy)
- TABC Emergency Rules (Nov 20, 2025 and Dec 24, 2025) — 180-day rules covering license applications, COA standards, retail conduct
Tennessee’s hemp beverage market is mid-transition through the most consequential regulatory change since original 2019 legalization. The 2023 framework (Public Chapter 423, SB 378) established TDA oversight, a 21+ minimum age, 6% sales tax, and a 25mg aggregate cannabinoids-per-serving cap. That framework operated until early 2026 alongside active litigation — Tennessee Growers Coalition et al. v. TDA challenged 2024 emergency rules and won an injunction from the Davidson County Chancery Court in December 2024. Rather than continue rulemaking, the 2025 legislature passed Public Chapter 526 (HB 1376/SB 1413), signed by Governor Bill Lee on May 21, 2025. Effective January 1, 2026, PC 526 transferred all HDCP oversight to the Tennessee Alcoholic Beverage Commission (TABC), redefined lawful hemp to exclude any product exceeding 0.3% total THC (including THCA), explicitly banned synthetic cannabinoids (delta-8, delta-10, HHC, THCP), and prohibited all online sales — mandating face-to-face brick-and-mortar transactions only. A negotiated settlement with the Tennessee Healthy Alternatives Association (TNHAA) permits legacy TDA licensees to continue operating under the 2023 framework until their existing licenses expire on June 30, 2026. TABC promulgated emergency rules on November 20, 2025 and again December 24, 2025 covering three-tier licensing (supplier, wholesaler, retailer), COA standards, and retail conduct. Tennessee is one of the few states expressly permitting on-premises HDCP consumption at alcohol licensees. The federal P.L. 119-37 §781 cliff on November 12, 2026 will further constrain the market — the 0.4mg/container federal cap is stricter than Tennessee’s operative 25mg per serving standard.
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Sources
This state summary has not yet been reviewed by counsel. Verify with your attorney before making commercial decisions.