There is no current evidence suggesting that CBD is addictive or habit forming.

We can ship all of our products we produce under the Federal farm Act. As it stands, cannabis and by association, CBD with a THC concentration higher than 0.3% is illegal at the Federal level. Any CBD that is mailed must be under .03% THC to remain legal. We do not ship any product over .3% THC. 

Hemp is defined in the Farm Bill Legislation (signed December 2018) as the cannabis plant (the same one that produces marijuana) with one key difference: hemp strains cannot contain more than 0.3 percent of THC (the compound in the plant most commonly associated with getting a person high). Hemp cannot get you high. Until the Farm Bill, federal law did not differentiate hemp from other cannabis plants, all of which were effectively made illegal in 1937 under the Marihuana Tax Act and formally made illegal in 1970 under the Controlled Substances Act—the latter banned cannabis of any kind. Hemp is no longer a controlled substance as defined by the federal government. (For more information see:

https://www.usda.gov/farmbill)

There are two main sources of CBD: hemp and cannabis. Unlike THC, CBD is not psycho-active and will not get you high. The 60-plus cannabinoids unique to the plant genus Cannabis interact with the endocannabinoid system that runs throughout your body. This system has many receptors that bind to the cannabinoids to stimulate many changes in the body ranging from pain relief to reducing the severity of seizures.

Cannabinoids are the chemical compounds active in the cannabis plant. There are over 85 different known cannabinoids that have been discovered in cannabis and they each exhibit different effects on the human body.