cannabis.wine / intel

West Virginia

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

West Virginia is one of the more legislatively active hemp beverage markets in the Southeast: naturally-derived hemp Delta-9 is permitted under a formal statutory framework, but subject to comprehensive licensing, taxation, and enforcement — plus a Schedule I ban on synthetic isomers. SB 220 (signed by Gov. Jim Justice March 23, 2023) created the Hemp-Derived Cannabinoid Regulation Act at W. Va. Code § 19-12E-12, establishing joint regulatory authority between the WV Department of Agriculture (WVDA) and the Alcohol Beverage Control Administration (ABCA) Commissioner. The framework requires permits for manufacturers, processors, distributors, and retailers; restricts sales to adults 21+; imposes labeling and testing standards; adds an 11% excise tax; and (unusually) attaches West Virginia nexus and jurisdiction to out-of-state DTC sellers who must register with the state. SB 546 (signed March 29, 2023, effective June 8, 2023) placed all delta tetrahydrocannabinols on Schedule I of the WV Uniform Controlled Substances Act, with a carve-out for products manufactured under the Industrial Hemp Development Act and the Medical Cannabis Act. The May 15, 2025 ABCA legislative rule added per-location retail permits, signage/placement rules, and on-site compliance requirements. Enforcement is joint (WVDA + ABCA), with stop-sale orders, civil penalties, and Class 2 misdemeanor exposure. Medical cannabis operates through the WV Office of Medical Cannabis (SB 386, 2017); no adult-use program.

Status
Restrictions
DTC shipping
Permitted with registration — out-of-state sellers of hemp-derived cannabinoid products must obtain a West Virginia business registration certificate under §11-12-1 et seq. and use age verification approved by the WVDA Commissioner; naturally-derived hemp Delta-9 shippable with proper registration; chemically converted cannabinoids (delta-8, delta-10, HHC, THC-O, THCP): PROHIBITED under SB 546 Schedule I; unregistered DTC subject to contraband seizure and Class 2 misdemeanor liability
Serving cap
None at state level; federal 0.3% delta-9 dry-weight standard applies via W. Va. Code § 19-12E-12; SB 220 requires product approval by Commissioner of Agriculture before sale
Container cap
None at state level; federal 0.3% delta-9 dry-weight standard applies; total THC calculation applies for compliance verification; naturally-derived Delta-9 required — chemically converted delta-9 falls under SB 546 Schedule I ban
Age gate
21+ statutorily required for all hemp-derived cannabinoid products under SB 220 (§19-12E-12); ID verification required at retail; approved age verification mechanism required for out-of-state DTC sellers; medical cannabis patients 18+ (minors with qualifying condition and parental consent)
License
WVDA processor and retailer permits required under §19-12E-12; $1,000 annual registration fee for kratom and hemp-derived cannabinoid processors and retailers; WVDA + ABCA joint permits; ABCA per-location retail permit (May 15, 2025 rule); USDA hemp producer license for cultivation via WVDA-administered USDA-approved plan; OMC medical cannabis licensing (separate framework); out-of-state DTC sellers must register with WV Secretary of State and obtain permits — West Virginia nexus attaches by statute
Regulator
West Virginia Department of Agriculture (WVDA) — Commissioner of Agriculture administers Industrial Hemp Development Act (W. Va. Code Chapter 19-12E) and Hemp-Derived Cannabinoid Regulation Act (§19-12E-12); administers USDA-approved plan for cultivation; issues manufacturer/processor/distributor permits; WV Alcohol Beverage Control Administration (ABCA) Commissioner — jointly administers §19-12E-12 with WVDA; May 15, 2025 rule added per-location retail permits; enforcement authority; WV Office of Medical Cannabis (OMC, under WV Bureau for Public Health) — administers Medical Cannabis Act (SB 386, 2017); local law enforcement — enforcement of criminal provisions
Current rule effective
June 8, 2023
Next known change — in 117 days
November 12, 2026 — Federal P.L. 119-37 § 781 takes effect. West Virginia's synthetic cannabinoid ban under SB 546 already aligns with Section 781's exclusion of chemically converted cannabinoids. West Virginia has no state-level per-container mg cap on naturally-derived hemp Delta-9, so Section 781's 0.4mg federal ceiling will directly reshape the hemp beverage math with no state pre-alignment on that dimension. Expect WVDA/ABCA to add a mg cap consistent with federal ceiling via emergency rulemaking in Q3-Q4 2026 or 2027 session action.
Federal alignment (P.L. 119-37 § 781)
Aligned with federal West Virginia's SB 546 (2023) Schedule I ban on all delta tetrahydrocannabinols (with carve-outs for Industrial Hemp Development Act and Medical Cannabis Act products) already aligns with Section 781's exclusion of chemically converted cannabinoids. West Virginia has no state-level per-container mg cap on naturally-derived hemp Delta-9, so Section 781's 0.4mg total-THC per-container federal ceiling will directly reshape the hemp beverage math with no state pre-alignment on that dimension. Expect WVDA and ABCA to jointly promulgate emergency rules under §19-12E-12(f) in Q3-Q4 2026 to conform state-level mg limits to federal ceiling, or 2027 legislative session action. The nexus provision (§19-12E-12) means out-of-state DTC sellers face state-level compliance obligations independent of federal law.

Retail channels

  • WVDA/ABCA-permitted retailers: hemp-derived Delta-9 beverages, gummies, tinctures, edibles under 0.3% delta-9 dry weight with naturally-derived compliance; 21+ ID required
  • General retail (grocery, convenience, wellness, smoke shops, CBD stores): permitted with WVDA + ABCA permits per May 15, 2025 rule; per-location permit required; signage/placement rules apply
  • Hemp Delta-9 beverages: national brands' naturally-derived products with WVDA product approval and out-of-state DTC registration
  • OMC-licensed medical cannabis dispensaries: full-potency cannabis products for OMC patients
  • Delta-8, delta-10, HHC, THC-O, THCP: PROHIBITED under SB 546 Schedule I; chemically converted delta-9 also prohibited
  • THCA hemp products: uncertain — hemp-derived THCA in compliance with 0.3% delta-9 dry-weight standard technically legal, but state has restricted intoxicating hemp; enforcement discretion applies
  • Smokable/inhalable hemp: subject to WVDA/ABCA regulation; inhalable product labeling warning required
  • Online DTC into WV: naturally-derived hemp products from registered out-of-state sellers with age verification; chemically converted products not permitted
  • Adult-use cannabis: NONE

Statutes & bills cited

  • W. Va. Code § 19-12E-1 et seq. — West Virginia Industrial Hemp Development Act; foundational hemp cultivation framework
  • W. Va. Code § 19-12E-12 — Hemp-Derived Cannabinoid Regulation Act; joint WVDA/ABCA administration; permit requirements; 11% excise tax; nexus jurisdiction over out-of-state DTC sellers
  • SB 220 (2023) — signed by Gov. Jim Justice March 23, 2023; created §19-12E-12; requires WVDA permits for manufacturers, processors, distributors, retailers; 21+ age gate; labeling/testing standards; approved age verification for out-of-state DTC; product approval by Commissioner required
  • SB 546 (2023) — signed by Gov. Justice March 29, 2023; effective June 8, 2023; placed all delta tetrahydrocannabinols on Schedule I of WV Uniform Controlled Substances Act; carve-out for products manufactured under Industrial Hemp Development Act and Medical Cannabis Act
  • HB 2694 (2019) — Industrial Hemp Development Act; established WV state hemp licensing program at 0.3% delta-9 dry-weight standard
  • SB 386 (2017) — Medical Cannabis Act; established Office of Medical Cannabis (OMC) under WV Bureau for Public Health
  • W. Va. C.S.R. § 61-30 — WVDA hemp administrative rule
  • May 15, 2025 ABCA Legislative Rule — added per-location retail permits for hemp-derived cannabinoid products and kratom; signage, placement, and on-site compliance requirements; joint enforcement authority
  • 2024 amendments to §19-12E-12 — reinforced contraband declaration and forfeiture authority
  • SB 220 penalties: unpermitted manufacture/processing/distribution/sale is a misdemeanor with fines $1,000-$5,000 and up to one year jail; each contaminated/adulterated packaged container is a separate offense
  • Nexus provision (§19-12E-12): out-of-state sellers shipping hemp-derived cannabinoid products into WV must obtain WV business registration certificate under §11-12-1 et seq. and register for permits

West Virginia built one of the most detailed statutory frameworks for hemp cannabinoid products in the Southeast in 2023, combining WVDA and ABCA joint oversight with an 11% excise tax, permit requirements up and down the supply chain, and a Schedule I ban on synthetic isomers — while preserving a naturally-derived hemp Delta-9 retail lane. SB 220, signed by Gov. Jim Justice on March 23, 2023, created the Hemp-Derived Cannabinoid Regulation Act at W. Va. Code § 19-12E-12. The Act’s stated purpose: ‘to allow limited, regulated access to naturally occurring hemp-derived cannabinoid products for adults 21 years of age and older.’ The framework’s operative rules include: (1) manufacturers, processors, distributors, and retailers must hold a permit from the WVDA Commissioner of Agriculture; (2) products must be reviewed and approved by the Commissioner before sale; (3) 21+ age gate required at retail with ID verification; (4) mandatory labeling and testing standards; (5) 11% excise tax on retail sales; (6) child-targeted packaging prohibitions; (7) advertising and marketing restrictions including precluding advertising of unapproved products in newspapers, radio, and TV; and — unusually for a state framework — (8) West Virginia nexus and jurisdiction attaches to out-of-state DTC sellers, who must obtain a WV business registration certificate under §11-12-1 et seq. and use age verification approved by the Commissioner. That nexus provision means national hemp beverage brands cannot lawfully ship into West Virginia addresses without first registering with the state — a compliance obligation independent of federal Farm Bill status. SB 546, signed by Gov. Justice on March 29, 2023 and effective June 8, 2023, placed all delta tetrahydrocannabinols on Schedule I of the WV Uniform Controlled Substances Act. Critically, SB 546 includes a carve-out for products manufactured, distributed, or possessed under the Industrial Hemp Development Act and under the Medical Cannabis Act — meaning naturally-derived hemp Delta-9 remains lawful within the §19-12E-12 permit framework. Chemically converted cannabinoids (delta-8, delta-10, HHC, THC-O, THCP, chemically converted delta-9) fall under the Schedule I ban and are prohibited at retail. Since the May 15, 2025 ABCA legislative rule took effect, WVDA and ABCA have conducted joint sweeps against unregistered retailers and unapproved products. The May 2025 rule added per-location retail permits, signage and placement rules, and on-site compliance requirements. Stop-sale orders, civil penalties, and Class 2 misdemeanor exposure follow noncompliance. Repeat offenders face criminal referrals. Enforcement authority runs jointly: certified law enforcement officers enforce criminal provisions, and ABCA enforcement agents enforce administrative retailer provisions. Penalties for unpermitted manufacture, processing, distribution, or sale under SB 220: misdemeanor with fines of $1,000-$5,000 and up to one year jail; each contaminated or adulterated packaged container is a separate and distinct violation. Any hemp-derived product found in violation of §19-12E-12 is declared contraband and subject to seizure, forfeiture, and destruction. Medical cannabis operates through the WV Office of Medical Cannabis (OMC) under the WV Bureau for Public Health, established by SB 386 (2017). The program is patient-only and does not overlap with the hemp retail channel. There is no adult-use cannabis program in West Virginia, and none is currently under serious legislative consideration. For the federal cliff on November 12, 2026, West Virginia is a state where the operative regulatory picture will shift meaningfully. SB 546’s Schedule I ban on chemically converted cannabinoids already aligns with Section 781’s synthetic cannabinoid exclusion — no state-level change needed there. But West Virginia has no state-level per-container mg cap on naturally-derived hemp Delta-9, so Section 781’s incoming 0.4mg total-THC per-container federal ceiling will reshape hemp beverage math with no state pre-alignment on that dimension. Nearly every hemp beverage sold in WV today (2.5-10mg per can) exceeds the incoming federal ceiling by 6-25×. Expect WVDA and ABCA to jointly promulgate emergency rules under §19-12E-12(f)’s emergency rulemaking authority in Q3-Q4 2026 to conform state-level mg limits to the federal ceiling, or 2027 legislative session action. The nexus provision means out-of-state DTC sellers face state-level registration and permit obligations independent of federal law — WV’s model may serve as a template for how other states enforce hemp beverage compliance post-cliff without amending core statute.


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