Wednesday, September 24, 2025

IT WOULD BE FAR BETTER IF THEY WOULD PROHIBIT SALE OF THC TO CUSTOMERS UNDER 99

Many Texas retailers can no longer sell THC to customers under 21

The age limit is expected to go into effect Tuesday after the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission approved the rule. Enforcement won’t begin until Oct. 1.

 

 
The Texas Tribune
Sep 23, 2025
 
 
THC products sit near the cash register in Hyde Park Market in Austin on May 5, 2025.
 

The Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission on Tuesday approved an emergency rule to ban liquor license holders from selling THC products to anyone under the age of 21, the agency’s first step toward fulfilling an executive order by Gov. Greg Abbott that called for stricter regulation of the products.

The emergency rule, which also requires retailers to verify IDs at the point of sale and only applies to those that also sell alcohol, takes effect as soon as it is posted to the Texas Register, expected later Tuesday. The agency does not intend to begin enforcement until Oct. 1 to give it enough time to relay the age limit to retailers. TABC license holders found to be violating the rule after Oct. 1 will have their license revoked, according to the rule.

The commission approved the rule just hours after releasing its text to the public, and less than two weeks after Abbott ordered TABC and the Texas Department of State Health Services to ban sales of THC “to minors” and to require verification of ID of all customers attempting to buy the products. The Tuesday morning meeting was the first public step toward fulfilling the governor’s directive by either agency.

However, the TABC’s rule does not encompass the entire landscape of retailers that sell the products. There are about 60,000 TABC license holders, such as restaurants and liquor stores, that can’t sell THC to people under 21 under the new rule. The rule wouldn’t apply to smoke shops, gas stations and online retailers that do not sell liquor and presumably do not have a liquor license with TABC. TABC communications director Chris Porter said the Department of State Health Services will be tasked with drafting its own rule for the remaining retailers, and enforcement may eventually be moved over to TABC. There are over 8,000 licensed hemp retailers under DSHS, which generate an estimated $5.5 billion in sales annually.

It could be months until TABC formally approves the 21 age limit and other regulations. TABC rules approved on an emergency basis are only in effect for up to 180 days, with the option to extend it a further 60 days. The formal rulemaking process includes further public meetings and testimony and is expected to begin at the commission’s next meeting on Nov. 18, and the agency said it hopes to adopt the formal rules in January. The formal rules are expected to be “substantively similar” to the emergency rules, the agency staff told the commissioners. Conversations between TABC and DSHS to further determine regulatory duties for each agency are ongoing, Porter said.

TABC, which primarily regulates the sale of alcohol in the state, pointed to potential harms to minors as the justification for the emergency rule.

“TABC has a statutory responsibility to ensure its license holders do not impede the general welfare, health, and safety of Texas communities,” TABC Executive Director Thomas Graham wrote in a statement Tuesday. “The commission’s actions today are a reasonable measure within its authority to help protect children across this state.”

The executive order came after the Texas Legislature spent the better part of the year debating a total ban or stricter regulations for the industry. A total ban approved by both the House of Representatives and the Senate was vetoed in June by Abbott. The governor then put THC regulation on the agenda for two consecutive special sessions over the summer, but lawmakers were unable to find a compromise before the end of the second session early this month.

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