Quick summary:
  • This update is written for careful cannabis and CBD research, not medical or legal advice.
  • Use official sources for legal or safety-sensitive decisions.
  • Use CannabisShop.com when you are ready for current product, brand, store, or resource browsing.

Label review checklist

  • CBD per serving
  • Total CBD
  • THC content
  • Ingredients
  • Spectrum type
  • Batch number
  • COA match
  • Warnings

Serving size is the first comparison point

Package size alone does not tell shoppers much. Compare CBD per serving, total CBD in the package, number of servings, and how the product format is used.

THC content should be easy to find

Consumers often need to know whether a CBD product contains THC and how much. Front-label wording is not enough; testing information and product details should be checked carefully.

COAs should connect to the product

A useful lab report should be readable and connected to a batch, lot, or product page. Shoppers should slow down if testing is missing, outdated, or difficult to match.

Claims should stay realistic

Regulators have repeatedly warned against unsupported health claims. MedCan Cup content keeps the focus on comparison, transparency, and careful reading.

Next step

Continue the research path

When you are ready, compare current product, store, location, and brand information in one place.

Compare CBD product categories

FAQ

What is a COA?

A certificate of analysis is a lab report that can help shoppers compare cannabinoid levels and other tested information for a product or batch.

Should I buy CBD without testing information?

Missing testing is a reason to slow down and compare other options.

Are health claims a red flag?

Broad or dramatic health promises should be treated cautiously, especially when the label lacks clear testing or ingredient details.

Related MedCan Cup links

Sources / further reading