South Carolina Moves to Regulate THC and Hemp Products Amid Federal Uncertainty

November 25, 2025
South Carolina Moves to Regulate THC and Hemp Products Amid Federal Uncertainty
  • Representative Chris Wooten advocates a framework that would raise the legal purchasing age to 21 for THC-containing products.

  • The House bill H. 3924 is under consideration as proponents push for timely regulation regardless of impending federal action next year.

  • South Carolina lawmakers are advancing a House-passed bill to regulate THC and hemp-derived products ahead of anticipated federal changes that could redefine hemp by total THC, signaling state action in the interim.

  • The measure would prohibit hemp-infused products for anyone under 21 and seeks to create state-level rules even as a federal ban on many hemp products looms.

  • Historically, South Carolina has had no hemp-infused beverage regulations, though these products are widely sold and generally require ID at purchase.

  • The SC hemp farming sector remains small and contracting, with 265 licensed growers in 2020, 98 in 2024, and 80 so far in 2025.

  • A 2025 SC proposal would set a 0.5 mg delta-9 THC limit for products, though the current bill contests potency restrictions and may add them after hearings.

  • Business owners like Libiss Skinner of High-Rise Beverage Co. testified on regulatory uncertainty and urged timely state regulation to reduce risk for firms operating in this space.

  • Legislators plan to craft a compromise amendment with input from industry, SLED, and other stakeholders, with potential revisions reviewed before a mid-January move to the full committee.

  • Retailers express concerns that strict potency limits could ban many products currently on store shelves and threaten livelihoods.

  • Law enforcement officials, including SLED Chief Mark Keel, warn that lack of FDA-style federal oversight and testing raises safety concerns.

  • State Senator Russell Ott argues for state regulation to proceed alongside unsettled federal policy, aiming to align state and federal approaches.

  • Some hemp product users and business owners support regulation and suggest packaging changes to reduce youth appeal.

  • SC Statehouse committees continue hearings on hemp regulation, with Agriculture and Natural Resources members planning further discussions in coming months.

  • Officials note hemp farming in SC is challenged by market saturation and price volatility, and while a new Farm Bill could affect federal rules, specifics remain uncertain.

  • State Sen. Michael Johnson indicates the bill’s path includes amendments on potency limits, serving sizes, on-premises rules, and taxes similar to alcohol, shaped by stakeholder input.

Summary based on 2 sources


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