Is THC Delivery Legal in Florida? What to Know in 2026 | Gramz 305

Is THC Delivery Legal in Florida? What to Know in 2026

A Gramz 305 guide — premium cannabis delivered across Miami, open 10:00 AM – 3:00 AM, 7 days a week.

Short answer: yes — delivery of hemp-derived THC products to adults 21 and over is legal in Florida, and no medical card is required. What is not legal is recreational marijuana. Florida has never legalized adult-use marijuana, and licensed medical marijuana still requires a state-issued patient card. The products you can legally order for delivery today are hemp-derived: cannabis that meets the federal and state definition of hemp. That distinction is not a marketing technicality. It is the entire legal foundation, and understanding it is the difference between an informed customer and a confused one.

Below is a straight explanation of where the law actually sits, what makes delivery lawful, what Florida added on top of federal rules, and what to look for before you order anything from anyone in Miami.

The 0.3% Line: Hemp and Marijuana Are the Same Plant, Different Legal Categories

Cannabis is one plant. Federal law splits it into two legal categories based on a single number.

The 2018 Farm Bill (the Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018) defined hemp as cannabis containing no more than 0.3% delta-9 THC by dry weight, and removed hemp and its derivatives from the Controlled Substances Act. Anything above that threshold remains marijuana, a Schedule I controlled substance federally.

Notice what the definition does and does not say. It sets a limit on delta-9 THC concentration by dry weight. It does not cap total cannabinoid content, and it does not distinguish by potency or effect. That is why a legal hemp flower can look, smell, and behave nothing like the industrial fiber hemp most people picture. Modern hemp cultivars are bred for cannabinoid expression, then tested to confirm they land under the line.

Florida adopted this framework directly. Florida Statute 581.217 governs the state hemp program, defines hemp along the same 0.3% threshold, and places it under the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services rather than any controlled-substance authority. In practical terms: compliant hemp is an agricultural commodity in Florida, not a controlled substance. That single fact is what makes retail sale and courier delivery possible without a dispensary license.

One honest caveat worth knowing: Florida's rules for hemp extract reference total delta-9 THC, which accounts for THCA converting to delta-9 THC when heated. This matters, it is actively litigated and legislated across states, and it is the reason a real lab report — not a sticker on a jar — is the only thing that tells you whether a product is compliant. Ask for the certificate of analysis. Any operator worth buying from will hand it over without being asked twice.

What Florida Adds on Top of the Farm Bill

The Farm Bill opened the door. Florida then wrote house rules. The important ones for a buyer:

  • 21 and over, no exceptions. Florida restricts the sale of hemp extract for human consumption to adults 21 and older. This is stricter than federal law, which sets no age floor. A legitimate delivery service checks ID at the door, every time, no matter how many times you have ordered.
  • No medical card required. Hemp is not marijuana, so the Office of Medical Marijuana Use has nothing to do with it. You do not need a qualifying condition, a physician certification, a card, or a registry entry.
  • Labeling and testing obligations. Hemp extract products sold in Florida are required to carry batch identification and to be supported by independent lab testing showing they meet the THC limit and are free of contaminants.
  • Marketing restrictions. Florida has tightened rules against packaging and advertising that appeals to children — candy-mimicking shapes, cartoon characters, and similar. This is why serious operators keep their packaging plain and adult.
  • Ongoing legislative pressure. Florida lawmakers have repeatedly attempted to cap potency and restrict hemp cannabinoids, and the governor has vetoed those bills more than once. The category is legal, and it is also politically live. Anyone who tells you the rules are permanently settled is guessing.

What Is Not Legal in Florida — Said Plainly

This is where most articles get vague. We will not.

Recreational marijuana is illegal in Florida. In November 2024, Amendment 3 would have legalized adult-use marijuana. It received a majority of votes but fell short of the 60% supermajority Florida requires to amend its constitution. It did not pass. Nothing since has changed that.

Possession of marijuana remains a criminal offense under Florida law: under 20 grams is a misdemeanor, over 20 grams is a felony. Concentrates are treated more harshly still. Buying marijuana from an unlicensed source is a crime for the seller and exposes the buyer to real risk.

Medical marijuana is legal, but gated. Since Amendment 2 passed in 2016, qualified patients can obtain marijuana through licensed Medical Marijuana Treatment Centers. That requires a physician certification, a state-issued patient ID card, and purchases from a licensed MMTC. Those dispensaries may deliver to registered patients. If you do not hold a card, that channel is closed to you.

So when you see a Miami service delivering flower and vapes to anyone 21+ without asking for a card, they are not operating a gray-market marijuana business — or at least, they should not be. They are selling hemp-derived products under 581.217. Gramz 305 operates in that lane: hemp-derived flower, vapes, and pre-rolls, sold to verified adults 21 and over, no card, no registry.

Why Delivery Specifically Is Lawful

People often assume delivery is the risky part. It isn't — the legality of delivery follows directly from the legality of the product.

Because compliant hemp is not a controlled substance, transporting it is not drug trafficking. It is moving an agricultural product. There is no state license required to hand a legal consumer good to a legal adult buyer at their door, the same way there is no special license to deliver coffee or CBD tincture. The Farm Bill also explicitly protects interstate transportation of compliant hemp — states may not block hemp shipments crossing their borders.

What delivery services do have to get right:

  • Age verification at handoff. Not at checkout. At the door. The 21+ requirement means nothing if the driver leaves a package on a porch.
  • Documentation that follows the product. Lab results tied to batch numbers, so any product in a vehicle can be shown compliant.
  • Compliant product in the first place. A courier does not launder an out-of-spec product. If what is in the bag exceeds the hemp threshold, it is marijuana, and the delivery is a felony regardless of how the website describes it.

That is the honest version. Delivery is legal because the product is legal. Nothing about a car makes noncompliant cannabis compliant.

Miami Specifics Worth Knowing

Miami-Dade County adopted a civil citation ordinance years ago that allows officers discretion to issue a fine rather than arrest for small amounts of marijuana. That discretion is real, and it is also discretion — it is not decriminalization, and state law still controls. Do not treat it as permission.

Practically, the friction points for Miami buyers are geographic rather than legal. Delivery windows in Miami-Dade are shaped by traffic, not by law: the Palmetto at 6 PM, the causeways on a weekend, the difference between a Coral Gables address and one in Homestead or up in Broward. Any service promising instant arrival across a forty-mile spread on demand is either overpromising or running a very small footprint.

The other Miami-specific reality: a lot of local sellers blur the hemp/marijuana line on purpose because ambiguity moves product. If a menu will not tell you which category it is selling, that answer is itself the answer.

Common Mistakes People Make

  • Assuming legal means consequence-free. Hemp-derived THC will trigger a positive drug test. Standard panels test for THC metabolites and cannot distinguish hemp-derived from marijuana-derived. If you hold a safety-sensitive job, a DOT-regulated position, a federal clearance, or are on probation, legality at the point of sale does not protect you at the point of testing.
  • Driving after consuming. Florida DUI law covers impairment by any substance. There is no hemp exemption. None.
  • Buying without a COA. The certificate of analysis is the only evidence a product sits under the threshold. No COA means no way to know whether what you are holding is legal hemp or a felony.
  • Crossing state lines casually. Farm Bill protections for hemp transport exist, but individual states have passed conflicting rules on specific cannabinoids. What is unremarkable in Florida can create a problem elsewhere.
  • Confusing hemp delivery with dispensary delivery. Two different legal regimes, two different products, two different sets of rules. Do not assume a card gets you a better hemp price, or that a hemp order counts toward anything at an MMTC.

How Legal Hemp Delivery Actually Works in Practice

Concretely, here is what a compliant Miami hemp delivery looks like from the customer side, using our own operation as the example.

Gramz 305 is based in Coral Gables and delivers across Miami-Dade, Broward, and the Upper Keys within a 40-mile radius. Ordering is open 10:00 AM to 3:00 AM, seven days a week. Deliveries themselves go out on a single run: the driver leaves at 7:00 PM daily, so orders placed by 7 PM go out that same day. Anything after that rolls to the next run. That is a real constraint of running one driver well rather than promising a fantasy.

The structure: $20 flat delivery fee, $75 minimum order. Premium eighths start at $30, quarters from $40, half-ounces at $100, ounces at $160. We carry flower, vapes, and pre-rolls. Payment is cash or CashApp ($Oskerspaid).

Every order is 21+ with ID verified at the door. Every batch has lab results behind it. No card, no registry, no medical certification — because hemp does not require any of those things, and we are not going to pretend otherwise in either direction.

The Bottom Line

THC delivery is legal in Florida when the THC is hemp-derived, compliant with the 0.3% delta-9 threshold, sold to an adult 21 or over, and backed by real lab testing. Recreational marijuana is not legal here — Amendment 3 failed in 2024 — and medical marijuana still requires a state card and a licensed dispensary. Those are three separate legal categories, and a seller who refuses to tell you which one they are operating in has told you something important.

Ask for the lab report. Confirm the age check. Understand that legal at purchase does not mean invisible on a drug test or excusable behind the wheel. Then order from someone who explains the rules to you before you ask.

This article is general information about Florida and federal law as of publication, not legal advice. Cannabis and hemp law changes frequently. Consult a Florida attorney for guidance on your specific situation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Gramz 305 deliver for is thc delivery legal in florida?

Yes — Gramz 305 delivers across Coral Gables, FL — serving Miami-Dade, Broward, and the Upper Keys (40-mile radius), open 10:00 AM – 3:00 AM, 7 days a week. Order by 7PM at gramz305.com for same-day.

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