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Delta 9 Syrup 2026: Legal THC Drink Mix Dosing and Review

HealthDataConsortium.org Editorial Team | Published April 9, 2026

This content is intended for adults aged 21 and older. Hemp-derived delta 9 THC syrups may cause psychotropic effects. Do not drive or operate heavy machinery after use. This article is for informational purposes only. Consult a healthcare professional before using any cannabinoid product.

There's a product format in the hemp-derived THC market that doesn't get much editorial attention: delta 9 syrup. While gummies and vapes dominate the search results and the shelf space, THC syrups offer something neither format can — the ability to turn any drink into a cannabinoid beverage with precise, adjustable dosing. TRĒ House (trehouse.com), operated by TRE Wellness, LLC, sells two delta 9 syrups with a combined 518 reviews on their website, and the product details are worth looking at closely because the cannabinoid math isn't what you'd assume from the headline numbers.

If you're looking at TRĒ House's full delta 9 product line — gummies, vapes, carts, and syrups — our best delta 9 products guide puts all the formats side by side. This guide goes deep on the syrups specifically.

What Delta 9 THC Syrup Actually Is

Delta 9 syrup is a THC-infused liquid designed to be mixed into beverages — soda, juice, tea, or consumed straight. The format works like a cannabis cocktail mixer: you add a measured amount to your drink, and the THC is absorbed through your digestive system the same way a gummy or other edible would be. That means the onset, duration, and metabolic pathway are similar to edibles — not to vapes.

The key advantage of syrup over gummies is dosing flexibility. A gummy is a fixed dose — you get 10mg per gummy, and your only option is to eat the whole thing or try to cut it in half. Syrup lets you measure your serving with a teaspoon. You can take a small sip for a microdose or a full 5ml serving for the labeled dose. That granularity is useful for people who are calibrating their preferred amount or who want less than a full gummy's worth.

What's Actually in TRĒ House's Delta 9 Syrups

This is where you need to read the label carefully, because the headline number doesn't tell the full story.

Both the Bussin' Berry (327 reviews) and the Watermelon Felon (191 reviews) are labeled as containing 1,000mg of total cannabinoids per bottle. That sounds massive — and compared to a 10mg gummy, it is. But the supplement facts panel on the Bussin' Berry tells a more specific story: each 5ml serving (one teaspoon) contains 43mg of total cannabinoids, broken down as 13mg of delta 9 THC and 30mg of delta 8 THC.

That's an important distinction. If you see “1,000mg delta 9 syrup” in a search result and assume the whole bottle is delta 9, you'd be wrong for this product. It's a delta 9 plus delta 8 blend, and delta 8 is the larger component per serving. The Watermelon Felon is described similarly — a “highly potent 1,000mg blend of Delta 9 and Delta 8.”

Why does this matter? Three reasons. First, delta 8 and delta 9 have different subjective effect profiles — delta 8 is generally described as milder. Second, delta 8 is restricted in more states than delta 9, which affects where these syrups can ship. Third, if you're tracking your delta 9 intake specifically, you need the per-serving breakdown, not the total bottle number. If you want to understand the differences between these two cannabinoids in more depth, our delta 8 vs delta 9 comparison covers effect profiles, legal status, and pricing.

How the 1,000mg Stays Legal

Under the 2018 Farm Bill, hemp-derived products are legal as long as they contain 0.3 percent or less delta-9 THC by dry weight. The key phrase is “by dry weight” — it's a percentage of the product's total weight, not the total milligrams. The syrups contain water, cane sugar, glycerin, MCT coconut oil, natural flavors, xanthan gum, citric acid, and other ingredients that collectively make the bottle weigh significantly more than the cannabinoid content.

The delta 9 content (13mg per 5ml serving, roughly 299mg across the full bottle) represents a small percentage of the total product weight. That's the same math that allows a 10mg delta 9 gummy to be legal — the gummy weighs several grams, and 10mg is well under 0.3% of that total weight. Our delta 9 legality guide explains this weight calculation in more detail, including what the November 2026 federal changes mean for this math.

Dosing, Onset, and Duration

According to TRĒ House, the serving size is one teaspoon (5ml). The company's dosing guidance says to start with a small sip, wait approximately 45 minutes, and see how you feel before taking more. That's consistent with standard edible guidance — start low, wait for full onset before redosing.

Because syrup is absorbed through the digestive tract, the onset profile is similar to gummies. You won't feel effects immediately. According to general edible guidance, onset typically ranges from 30 to 90 minutes depending on whether you've eaten recently, your metabolism, and your body composition. Once effects arrive, TRĒ House states that THC edible effects can last six to eight hours. That's comparable to gummies and significantly longer than vaping (one to two hours). For a detailed comparison of onset and duration across all formats, see our delta 9 dosing guide.

Price and Per-Serving Economics

Both syrups are $29.99 (sale price; regular $39.99) for a bottle containing 23 servings. That's approximately $1.30 per serving — compared to $1.75 per gummy for the TRĒ House delta 9 gummies. Per serving, the syrup is roughly 25 percent cheaper. Per milligram of delta 9 specifically, the syrup delivers 13mg per $1.30 serving ($0.10/mg of D9), while the gummy delivers 10mg per $1.75 serving ($0.175/mg of D9). The syrup is more economical on a per-milligram basis — though the gummies offer more convenient, portable, pre-measured dosing.

TRĒ House offers subscribe-and-save at 30 percent off plus free shipping, and the standard free shipping threshold is $99. The 60-day return policy applies to unopened products. For a price comparison across the full product line, see our product guide.

State Availability and Drug Testing

Both syrups ship to all states except California, Connecticut, Idaho, North Dakota, Nevada, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Utah, Vermont, and Washington. The restriction list is longer than the pure delta 9 gummies (which exclude only five states) because the syrups contain delta 8 — and delta 8 is restricted in more jurisdictions than delta 9 alone.

On drug testing: both cannabinoids in the syrup — delta 9 and delta 8 — produce THC-COOH or similar metabolites that standard drug tests detect. The test can't distinguish between hemp-derived and marijuana-derived sources. If you face drug screening, this product should be avoided. Our drug test guide covers detection windows and metabolite science in detail.

Who Delta 9 Syrup Is Actually For

This format makes sense for a few specific situations. If you don't like the taste or texture of gummies, syrup mixed into a beverage may be more pleasant. If you want more precise dosing control than a pre-formed gummy allows, the teaspoon-based measurement gives you flexibility. If you prefer to consume THC as part of a drink rather than as a standalone edible, the mixer format fits naturally into that. And if per-serving cost is a factor, the syrup is the most economical option in TRĒ House's delta 9 lineup.

It doesn't make sense if you want fast onset — vapes deliver effects in minutes, and our vape and cart guide covers those options. It's also not ideal if you want a portable single-serving format, since gummies are easier to carry (see our gummies guide). And if you're in a state that restricts delta 8 but not delta 9, the pure D9 gummies would ship to you while the syrups wouldn't.

For delta 8 product options on TRĒ House's platform, our delta 8 buyer's guide covers that side of the catalog. And for anyone weighing these products against the backdrop of the November 2026 federal hemp law changes, our legality guide covers what those changes mean and where the delay legislation stands.

HealthDataConsortium.org Editorial Team — This article was produced independently. Individual results vary. All product details and pricing are based on publicly available information as of April 2026 and are subject to change. Products containing THC have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. May cause psychotropic effects. Must be 21 or older. Do not drive or operate heavy machinery. Consult your physician before use if you take prescription medications. Verify your state's regulations before purchasing.