Traditional hemp — CBD or CBG flower with 0.3% or less delta-9 THC — won't get you high, though some users feel mild relaxation or a subtle head change from terpenes and the entourage effect. Hemp-derived delta-8 and delta-9 THC products, sold legally as hemp under the 2018 Farm Bill, are a different story and absolutely can produce a real buzz.
The honest answer: it depends what you mean by "hemp"
"Hemp" used to mean one thing: cannabis with 0.3% or less delta-9 THC, grown for fiber, seed, or CBD-rich cannabinoids. Smoke that, and the answer is mostly no, you won't get high.
But the 2018 Farm Bill's definition of hemp opened a regulatory side door, and today "hemp" is also the legal label on delta-8 vape carts, delta-9 gummies, and THC-infused seltzers that absolutely will give you a buzz.
The real answer depends on which kind of hemp you're asking about.
What CBD or CBG hemp flower actually feels like
Traditional hemp flower — high-CBD or high-CBG buds from a smokable hemp brand ... won't intoxicate you.
I've vaporized CBD flower a few times, and what I noticed wasn't a buzz exactly. It was more like a slight head change. Mellow. The kind of subtle shift you might miss if you weren't paying attention.
Years ago, when my THC tolerance was high, I doubt I'd have felt much at all. Now that I no longer use psychoactive cannabis, the contrast was easier to register — but it still didn't cross into anything I'd call a high.
That tracks with what most cannabis-experienced users report. Hemp flower gives you a mood adjustment, not a head trip.
The first one or two times you try it, you may notice more — partly because there's no tolerance baseline, partly because terpenes and minor cannabinoids hit fresh receptors, and partly because the act of smoking primes you to expect something.
Psychoactive isn't the same as intoxicating
This is where most articles on hemp get it wrong. CBD is psychoactive. So is caffeine, nicotine, and St. John's Wort.
"Psychoactive" just means a substance affects brain chemistry — mood, cognition, perception. By that definition, anything that helps with anxiety or sleep is psychoactive, including CBD.
What CBD isn't is intoxicating. Intoxication means impairment — the disconnect from baseline awareness that defines being "high" or "drunk."
CBD doesn't do that, even at gram-level doses tested in clinical trials.
So when someone says CBD "does nothing," they usually mean it's not intoxicating — which is true. But it does have effects, and calling them nothing is inaccurate.
The buzz spectrum, named
From least to most pronounced, here's what people actually report from various hemp products:
Hemp-derived THC is a different animal
Here's the part most articles skip. The 2018 Farm Bill defined hemp by its delta-9 THC content (0.3% or less by dry weight), but it didn't address other THC isomers.
Manufacturers responded by isolating CBD and converting it into delta-8 THC, then later started selling delta-9 gummies engineered to stay under 0.3% by weight while still containing 5–25 mg of THC per serving, enough to get most people high.
These products are sold as "hemp-derived" and are legal in most states under federal law. They are also, in any practical sense, intoxicating.
A 10 mg delta-9 gummy from a hemp brand hits a low-tolerance user roughly the same as a 10 mg gummy from a state-licensed cannabis dispensary.
The 5 mg "hemp seltzer" sold in grocery stores will produce a noticeable buzz in anyone who isn't a regular cannabis consumer.
If you searched "do you get a buzz from hemp" because you tried a hemp gummy and felt high, that's why. The product being labeled "hemp" reflects the legal definition, not the effect.
What shapes your experience
About driving and drug tests
Even non-intoxicating CBD flower contains trace THC, and heavy regular use can produce a positive workplace drug test.
Hemp-derived delta-8 and delta-9 products will impair driving and will trigger a positive drug test — treat them like cannabis, not like CBD oil.
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