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Best Delta 9 Products 2026: Gummies, Vapes, Syrups Tested

HealthDataConsortium.org Editorial Team | Published April 9, 2026

This content is intended for adults aged 21 and older. Hemp-derived delta 9 THC products may cause psychotropic effects. This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute medical, legal, or purchasing advice. Consult a qualified healthcare professional before using any cannabinoid product, especially if you take prescription medications or have underlying health conditions.

If you've been searching for where to buy delta 9 online — whether you're looking for the best delta 9 gummies, legal THC gummies that ship without a dispensary visit, or hemp-derived THC products you can order with no medical card — you've probably noticed a problem: every list recommends the same handful of brands, nobody explains how they verified anything, and almost none of them mention the federal deadline that could make most of these products illegal in seven months. That's not a small detail to skip over.

Here's what we mean. On November 12, 2025, Congress signed P.L. 119-37 into law. It rewrites the federal definition of hemp by capping finished products at 0.4 milligrams of total THC per container — a change that, if enforced as written on November 12, 2026, would eliminate roughly 95 percent of the hemp-derived cannabinoid products currently sold in the United States, according to the U.S. Hemp Roundtable. A bipartisan delay bill (H.R. 7024, the Hemp Planting Predictability Act) with 33 co-sponsors has been referred to the House Agriculture Committee, but as of April 2026, it hasn't advanced. The clock is running.

That regulatory context isn't a footnote — some are calling it a hemp ban, and that framing isn't far off. It changes what you should look for when choosing a brand right now. Specifically, it raises questions about whether a company is transparent about lab testing, whether they disclose which states they can and can't ship to, and whether their products are actually compliant with the laws that exist today — not just the ones that existed two years ago. We used those criteria to evaluate 14 delta 9 products from TRĒ House (trehouse.com), a brand operated by TRE Wellness, LLC. TRĒ House has built one of the largest product lines in the hemp-derived cannabinoid space — gummies, vapes, carts, disposable pens, and THC syrups — and we checked every COA, ingredient list, and shipping restriction we could find.

What follows isn't a listicle of brands we haven't tried. It's a data-driven TRĒ House delta 9 review — a full evaluation of the brand's lineup measured against the standards that actually matter in this market right now. If you're looking for a deep dive specifically on delta 9 gummies, we've got that too. But this guide covers the whole picture.

How We Evaluated These Products

Every “best delta 9” list should start by telling you what they measured and why. A 2025 industry audit found that 74 percent of hemp edibles failed basic testing standards — potency didn't match labels, safety panels were incomplete, or both. That's not a fringe statistic. It means three out of four products you might buy at random aren't what they claim to be.

We looked at five things for every TRĒ House product in this evaluation. First, whether the company publishes Certificates of Analysis (COAs) for each product, not just the brand overall. TRĒ House does — their lab reports page links to product-specific COAs. Second, whether the cannabinoid profile on the COA matches what's printed on the label. Third, whether the ingredient list is clean (pectin-based, vegan, no synthetic colors in the gummies; zero additives in the vapes). Fourth, whether the company clearly discloses which states it can't ship specific products to — and this is where TRĒ House stands out, because their shipping restrictions vary by product type and by specific cannabinoid, not just a blanket state list. Fifth, whether their pricing is transparent and consistent with what you'd pay at checkout.

If you're also evaluating delta 8 products, we applied the same methodology to our full delta 8 buyer's guide — and there's meaningful overlap, since TRĒ House sells both and several products contain both cannabinoids.

The TRĒ House Delta 9 Gummy Lineup

TRĒ House sells six distinct gummy products that contain delta 9 THC. They don't all contain the same cannabinoid blend, and that matters more than most guides acknowledge. A gummy with 10mg of pure delta 9 will feel different from a gummy with 10mg of delta 9 plus 5mg of HHC plus 5mg of delta 10 — the layered cannabinoid approach produces what the industry calls an “entourage effect,” though the subjective experience varies person to person. Here's what each product actually contains, according to the company's published product pages and supplement facts panels.

The Delta 9 + CBD Gummies in Peach Pear flavor pair 10mg of delta 9 with 10mg of full spectrum CBD per gummy. According to TRĒ House, the CBD is unfiltered hemp extract containing the plant's full cannabinoid, terpene, and flavonoid profile. The idea behind a 1:1 THC-to-CBD ratio is that the CBD may smooth out the intensity of the delta 9, though individual responses vary. These are $34.99 for a 20-count bottle (sale price; regular $44.99), vegan and gluten-free, pectin-based, and ship to every state except California, Idaho, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. With 864 reviews on the TRĒ House website, these are the brand's most popular delta 9 gummy by a wide margin.

The Delta 9 + HHC + Delta 10 Gummies in Sour Blue Raspberry are the multi-cannabinoid option — 10mg delta 9, 5mg HHC (hexahydrocannabinol), and 5mg delta 10 per gummy. According to the company, this combination is designed to create a layered psychotropic experience that's different from pure delta 9. These cost $34.99 for 20 gummies and have 724 reviews. The shipping restriction list is longer: California, Connecticut, Idaho, North Dakota, Nevada, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Utah, Vermont, and Washington. The expanded restriction list reflects the fact that HHC and delta 10 are restricted in more states than delta 9 alone.

The pure delta 9 gummies come in three flavors — Strawberry (95 reviews), Blue Raspberry (67 reviews), and Mango (44 reviews) — each containing 10mg of delta 9 THC per gummy with no additional cannabinoids. These are the simplest option: one cannabinoid, straightforward dosing, $34.99 for 20 gummies. They ship to all states except California, Idaho, Oregon, Utah, and Washington — the shortest restriction list in the lineup.

The ItsPurpl Purple Punch THCA Gummies, a collaboration with actor Jaleel White, are the highest-potency option in the line. According to the company's product page, each gummy contains 15mg THCA, 5mg THC-P, 125mg delta 8, and 10mg delta 9 — totaling 155mg of cannabinoids per single gummy. That's substantially more than any other gummy in this evaluation. These are $39.99 for a 15-count pouch and carry the most extensive shipping restrictions: Alabama, California, Connecticut, DC, Idaho, Minnesota, North Dakota, Nevada, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Utah, Vermont, and Washington. For a closer look at how THCA converts to active THC when consumed and what that means for potency and drug testing, see our delta 9 drug test guide.

If you're specifically comparing gummies — including dosing for first-timers, price per milligram, and which specific gummy ships to your state — we broke that down in detail in our best delta 9 gummies deep dive.

Vapes, Carts, and Disposable Pens

The vape and cart side of TRĒ House's delta 9 lineup is where the brand gets more complex — and where the extraction method starts to matter as much as the cannabinoid content. According to the company, they use three distinct extraction approaches across their inhalable products: standard live resin, live rosin liquid diamonds, and live resin liquid budder. Each method retains different levels of the plant's original terpene and cannabinoid profile, which — according to TRĒ House — affects both flavor and the subjective quality of the experience.

The THC-P Cartridge in Rainbow Sherbet is a 1-gram 510-thread cart containing a live resin blend of delta 8, delta 10, and THC-P. It's the most affordable inhalable at $19.99 (sale price; regular $29.99) and has 267 reviews. The 510-thread format means it works with any standard vape battery — you don't need TRĒ House-specific hardware. Shipping restrictions are extensive for this product: California, Connecticut, DC, Idaho, Louisiana, Minnesota, North Dakota, Nevada, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Texas, Utah, Vermont, and Washington.

The Live Rosin Liquid Diamonds Disposable Pens come in Pineapple Express (hybrid, 194 reviews) and Candyland (sativa, 170 reviews). According to the product pages, each 2-gram disposable pen contains 1,200mg delta 8, 500mg HHC, 5mg delta 9, 50mg delta 10, and 50mg THC-P. These are rechargeable disposables rated for approximately 800 puffs. The company describes the live rosin extraction as a solventless process that retains more of the plant's original terpenes than standard extraction. These cost $39.99 each (regular $49.99). Same extensive shipping restrictions as the THC-P cart.

The THCA Live Resin Liquid Budder Pens come in Sunset Sherbet (indica, 69 reviews) and White Widow (hybrid, 69 reviews). According to TRĒ House, these 2-gram disposables contain delta 8, THCA, delta 9, and THC-P in a liquid budder concentrate — a thicker, more terpene-rich cannabis concentrate that the company says provides stronger flavor and more pronounced effects than standard extract. These are $39.99 each. Shipping restrictions differ slightly from the other vapes: Alabama, California, DC, Minnesota, North Dakota, Puerto Rico, Texas, Utah, Vermont, and Washington.

One thing that's worth noting for anyone comparing formats: according to TRĒ House, vape effects typically set in within minutes and last one to two hours, while edibles take 30 minutes to two hours for onset but can last six to eight hours. That's a meaningful difference in how you plan your experience. Our delta 9 vapes, carts, and pens guide breaks down the extraction method differences and what they mean in practice. And if you're comparing to delta 8 vapes, our delta 8 carts and vapes evaluation covers the same brand's delta 8 inhalable lineup.

Delta 9 THC Syrups

TRĒ House's THC syrups are one of the more unusual product formats in the hemp-derived cannabinoid market — and one where there's almost no competitive editorial coverage. The concept is simple: a THC-infused liquid you can mix into a beverage or drink straight. But the details matter.

The Bussin' Berry Delta 9 Syrup (327 reviews) and Watermelon Felon Delta 9 Syrup (191 reviews) each contain 1,000mg of total cannabinoids per bottle across 23 servings. Here's where you need to read the supplement facts carefully: the Bussin' Berry label shows each 5ml serving contains 43mg of cannabinoids broken down as 13mg of delta 9 and 30mg of delta 8. This is not 43mg of delta 9. The distinction matters — especially if you're in a state that restricts delta 8 but not delta 9, or if you're calibrating your dosage based on delta 9 specifically.

Both syrups are $29.99 (regular $39.99) and ship to all states except California, Connecticut, Idaho, North Dakota, Nevada, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Utah, Vermont, and Washington. The company recommends starting with a small sip and waiting 45 minutes before taking more — sound advice, since syrup follows the same edible digestion pathway as gummies and the effects can take time to manifest. For dosing guidance across all product formats, including how syrup onset differs from gummies and vapes, see our delta 9 dosing and safety guide.

We published a full breakdown of these products, including per-serving cost versus gummies and who the syrup format actually makes sense for, in our delta 9 syrup guide.

State Shipping Restrictions — Why They Vary by Product

One of the most useful things about TRĒ House's product line for this evaluation is that their shipping restrictions vary by specific product, not just by brand. That means you can actually see how different cannabinoid blends create different legal exposure — and which products are available where you live.

The pure delta 9 gummies (Strawberry, Blue Raspberry, Mango) have the shortest restriction list: only five states. Products containing HHC or delta 10 add Connecticut, North Dakota, Nevada, Puerto Rico, and Vermont. Products containing THC-P or THCA add even more states. And the inhalable products (vapes, carts, pens) have the longest lists because some states restrict specific cannabinoids only in inhalable form, not in edibles.

This product-level granularity is something most brands don't provide — and it's why “is delta 9 legal in my state?” doesn't have a single answer. The answer depends on which specific cannabinoids are in the product and what form it takes. We mapped the full legal picture, including the November 2026 federal deadline, in our delta 9 legality state-by-state guide.

What About Drug Tests?

We're going to be direct about this because TRĒ House is, too. Every product page on their website includes a statement that their delta 9 products will very likely show up on a standard drug test. That's because the body metabolizes delta 9 THC into THC-COOH — the same metabolite that a urine, blood, hair, or saliva test detects regardless of whether the THC came from hemp or marijuana. The test can't tell the difference.

This applies to every product in this evaluation. The multi-cannabinoid products (containing delta 8, delta 10, HHC, THC-P, or THCA) carry the same risk — all THC isomers produce similar metabolites. If you face workplace drug testing or any other screening, you should avoid all of these products. We covered the detection windows, the science behind THC-COOH, and what this means practically in our delta 9 drug test guide. If you've used delta 8 products before and are wondering whether switching to delta 9 changes anything on a drug test, it doesn't — our delta 8 drug test article covers the same metabolite science.

How to Read a Hemp-Derived THC Certificate of Analysis

If there's one takeaway from this evaluation, it's that COA verification is the single most important thing you can do before buying any hemp-derived THC product. A Certificate of Analysis is a third-party lab report that verifies what's actually in the product. Here's what to look for on any COA, including TRĒ House's.

Check that the lab is ISO 17025 accredited — this means the lab itself has been independently verified for testing accuracy. Look at the cannabinoid potency panel: it should show the exact milligrams of each cannabinoid per serving and per container, and those numbers should match what's on the product label. Look for the safety panels: pesticides, heavy metals, residual solvents, and microbial contamination should all be tested and should all pass. Check the batch number on the COA against the batch number on your product — they should match. And look at the date: a COA from two years ago doesn't tell you anything about the bottle in your hand.

TRĒ House publishes COAs on their lab reports page. If you want to go deeper into brand verification methodology — what to look for and what red flags to avoid — our colleagues applied the same framework to delta 8 brands in how to spot a legit delta 8 brand. The same principles apply to delta 9.

Who These Products Are For — and Who They're Not For

Based on everything in this evaluation, TRĒ House's delta 9 lineup is well-suited for adults 21 and older in states where hemp-derived cannabinoid products are legal. It's a good fit for people who want a range of product formats and cannabinoid profiles from a single brand with published lab reports and transparent shipping restrictions. The variety is genuinely unusual — few brands offer gummies, vapes, carts, disposable pens, and syrups under one roof, and the multi-cannabinoid formulations give experienced users options to customize their experience.

These products are not for anyone under 21, anyone who is pregnant or nursing, anyone who faces drug testing, anyone in a state where these products are restricted, or anyone who hasn't consulted with a healthcare professional about potential interactions with prescription medications. The company states this on every product page, and we're reinforcing it here.

If you're deciding between delta 8 and delta 9 products — whether for potency, legal availability, or effect profile — our delta 8 vs delta 9 comparison walks through the differences using TRĒ House's own product line as the test case, since they sell both. And if you're new to cannabinoid products entirely, start with our beginner's dosing and safety guide before making a purchase.

The Regulatory Context You Should Know About

We opened this guide with the November 2026 deadline, and we're closing with it too, because it affects every product in this evaluation. As of April 2026, hemp-derived delta 9 products that comply with the 2018 Farm Bill's 0.3% delta-9-THC-by-dry-weight threshold are federally legal. That's the law under which TRĒ House and every other brand in this space currently operates.

P.L. 119-37, signed November 12, 2025, changes three things effective November 12, 2026: the THC measurement shifts from delta-9-only to total THC (including THCA and delta 8), finished products are capped at 0.4mg of total THC per container, and synthetically derived cannabinoids are excluded from the hemp definition. The U.S. Hemp Roundtable has estimated that this would eliminate approximately 95 percent of current hemp-derived products, affecting more than 300,000 jobs and over $1.5 billion in state tax revenue.

The Hemp Planting Predictability Act (H.R. 7024) would delay that enforcement date to November 2028 and has bipartisan support from 33 co-sponsors in the House. A Senate companion has been introduced. But as of this writing, neither bill has advanced past committee referral. For the full breakdown of what this means state by state and what consumers should do, see our full legality guide.

We don't know how this plays out. What we do know is that today, these products are legal in most states, the brand we evaluated publishes its lab reports, discloses its shipping restrictions at the product level, and provides clear dosing guidance. Those are the data points that matter for making an informed decision right now.

HealthDataConsortium.org Editorial Team — HealthDataConsortium.org is committed to data-driven consumer health reporting. This article was produced independently and was not sponsored, reviewed, or approved by any product manufacturer. HealthDataConsortium.org does not provide medical advice, and nothing in this article should be construed as a recommendation to use any product. Individual results vary. All product details, pricing, and availability are based on publicly available information as of April 2026 and are subject to change. Products containing delta 9 THC and other cannabinoids have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Cannabis-derived products may cause psychotropic effects. Do not drive or operate heavy machinery after using any THC product. If you are on prescription medication, consult your physician before use. Laws regarding hemp-derived cannabinoid products vary by state and are subject to change — verify your state's current regulations before purchasing.