Texas CUP News & Legislation

Hemp Ban vs. Medical Expansion: What the 2025 Legislature Means for Texas Patients

marijuana flower with ban emblem across it

👀 Two Opposite Bills, One Confused Patient Community

This session, lawmakers have put two headline bills on the fast track:

Bill What It Tries to Do
SB 3 Ban or tightly restrict all “intoxicating” hemp-derived THC products (delta-8, delta-10, HHC, high-THCA flower) and launch a new license-and-testing system for the remaining CBD market.
HB 46 (House) & SB 1505 (Senate companion) Expand the Compassionate Use Program (CUP): change the per-dose THC limit, add chronic pain, traumatic brain injury, palliative/hospice-related conditions, and Crohn’s/inflammatory bowel disease, allow more dispensary locations, and issue up to 12 new licenses.

Patients keep asking:

“Will my delta-8 gummies disappear?”
“Will I finally qualify for a stronger, doctor-supervised product?”
“Do I need to switch medicines—or wait for a vote?”


💡Restricting Unregulated Hemp and Expanding Regulated Medicine Could Co-Exist

Split image contrasting hemp gummies labeled ‘Banned?’ with physician-labeled Certified medical cannabis marked ‘Safe & Legal’ beside the Texas Capitol.

Split image contrasting hemp gummies labeled ‘Banned?’ with physician-labeled Certified medical cannabis marked ‘Safe & Legal’ beside the Texas Capitol. Illustrative AI-generated image

 

Why the hemp bill exists:

  • Delta-8 and similar compounds are sold in gas stations with little testing or age control.
  • Poison-control calls have spiked among minors.
  • Lawmakers want tighter safeguards.

Why the expansion bill matters:

  • CUP products are physician-guided, batch-tested, and traceable.
  • Raising the THC cap (still well below recreational levels) could give patients stronger, more effective dosing without turning to unregulated hemp.
  • More dispensaries mean shorter drive times and potentially lower costs.

In short: cracking down on gray-market hemp doesn’t have to punish legitimate patients—if the medical program grows in tandem.


What Patients Should Expect (If the Bills Pass as Written)

Scenario Hemp Bill Impact Medical Expansion Impact
Both Bills Pass Hemp-derived intoxicants disappear from retail shelves; untested delta-8 gummies gone. CUP cap increases, more conditions covered, 12 new dispensaries—safer access but prescription required.
Only Hemp Ban Passes Retail delta-8/delta-10 banned; patients lose an over-the-counter option. Existing CUP rules stay at 1 % THC cap; some turn to illicit sources.
Only Expansion Passes Hemp market unchanged; patients gain stronger, doctor-supervised options. Wider eligibility reduces demand for unregulated hemp.
Neither Passes Status quo: untested hemp continues; CUP remains restricted. Ongoing confusion, variable product quality.

🎯How to Protect Your Access Right Now

  1. Know What You’re Using
    • Hemp store product? Check third-party COAs and keep purchase receipts.
    • CUP prescription? Screenshot your CURT entry and keep the label intact.
  2. Follow Legislative Progress
    • Bookmark SB 3 and HB 46 on Texas Legislature Online; final language can change overnight.
    • Sign up for Floweret MD email alerts—quick updates, no spam.
  3. Talk to Your Physician Early
    • If you rely on delta-8 for sleep or pain, schedule a CUP consult now. Transition plans take time.
  4. Share Your Story (Optional)
    • Lawmakers listen to constituents. A polite email about how safe, physician-guided cannabis helps you can influence votes.

📌 Final Thought

Texas is inching toward a safer, more regulated cannabis landscape—but the road may include tighter rules on unregulated hemp. Staying informed, documenting your usage, and working with a CUP-registered physician will keep your relief legal and consistent no matter which way the votes swing.


💬 Need Guidance on Switching from Hemp Gummies to Compassionate Use Program Products?

Floweret MD can explain dosing differences, cost, and legal protections in a quick, judgment-free telehealth visit.

➡️ Book a telehealth visit and stay ahead of the changes.


📚 References

  1. Texas Legislature Online – SB 3 (2025 Regular Session)
    https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/History.aspx?LegSess=89R&Bill=SB3

  2. Texas Legislature Online – HB 46 (2025 Regular Session)
    https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/History.aspx?LegSess=89R&Bill=HB46

  3. Texas Legislature Online – SB 1505 (2025 Regular Session)
    https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/History.aspx?LegSess=89R&Bill=SB1505

  4. Texas Department of State Health Services – Consumable Hemp FAQs
    https://www.dshs.texas.gov/hemp

  5. Texas Department of Public Safety – Compassionate Use Program
    https://www.dps.texas.gov/section/compassionate-use-program


Disclaimer: This content is educational and not legal or medical advice. Consult a qualified professional about your specific situation.

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