Yes.
The 2026 U.S. Farm Bill introduces a stricter definition of intoxicating hemp, a move that could force many Wisconsin retailers selling delta‑9 THC and other hemp‑derived items to shut their doors as early as November.
Under the revised rule, any product container holding more than 0.4 milligrams of THC is prohibited from sale. This threshold is far lower than Wisconsin’s current allowance, which permits up to 0.3 percent delta‑9 THC by weight—effectively allowing considerably higher total THC amounts per product.
Today, Wisconsin dispensaries operate under a loophole created by the 2018 Farm Bill, which places no concentration caps on cannabinoids such as delta‑8, THCP, or delta‑10. The new 0.4 mg limit renders most existing edibles, tinctures, and vape cartridges non‑compliant.
The regulation takes effect on November 12, 2026, giving businesses a narrow window to adjust inventories, reformulate products, or cease operations.
Economic impact
Governor Tony Evers projects that the impending closure could affect roughly 3,500 jobs and remove about $700 million from the state’s economy. Wisconsin currently hosts 470 federally licensed hemp growers, many of whom supply the raw material for the affected product lines.
Industry reaction
Trade associations warn that the abrupt shift may push consumers toward unregulated markets, potentially undermining public‑health objectives. Some companies are exploring reformulation to stay beneath the new THC ceiling, while others are considering a pivot to non‑intoxicating hemp products such as fiber or CBD isolates.
Sources
This article first appeared on Wisconsin Watch and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
