## The Short Answer
**THC** and **CBD** are the two cannabinoids that drive most consumer decisions at a licensed dispensary. THC is intoxicating; CBD is not. Both interact with the human endocannabinoid system, but they target different receptors and produce different effects. Most cannabis products contain both, and the ratio between them is one of the most useful pieces of information on a product label.
## THC: The Psychoactive One
Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) is the cannabinoid primarily responsible for the intoxicating effects of cannabis, the "high." It binds directly to CB1 receptors in the brain and central nervous system, which is why its effects are so prominent compared to most other cannabinoids.
Common descriptions of a THC-dominant experience: altered time perception, heightened sensory experience, increased appetite, euphoria, relaxation, and, at higher doses, anxiety, disorientation, and paranoia. Individual response varies significantly. Tolerance builds with regular use.
In New York, adult-use edibles are capped at 10 mg THC per serving and 100 mg per package, a limit designed to reduce accidental overconsumption.
## CBD: The Non-Intoxicating One
Cannabidiol (CBD) doesn't bind directly to CB1 receptors. Instead it modulates them indirectly and interacts with a broader set of receptors throughout the body. The result: CBD does not produce a high.
CBD is available in three major forms at dispensaries and hemp-derived retail:
- **Isolate**: pure CBD, zero THC
- **Broad-spectrum**: CBD plus other cannabinoids and terpenes, but no THC
- **Full-spectrum**: CBD plus trace THC (under 0.3% for hemp-derived; variable for cannabis-derived) and the full plant chemistry
Research on CBD is still developing. The only CBD product with FDA approval is Epidiolex, for specific seizure disorders. Claims beyond that are consumer reports, not medical evidence.
## The Differences
| Attribute | THC | CBD |
|---|---|---|
| Intoxicating? | Yes | No |
| Federally legal? | No (Schedule I) | Yes for hemp-derived ≤0.3% THC |
| Drug test risk? | High | Low (but full-spectrum products contain trace THC) |
| Common product formats | Flower, vapes, edibles, tinctures, concentrates | Tinctures, capsules, topicals, beverages |
| Typical onset (inhaled) | 1–5 minutes | 5–15 minutes |
| Typical onset (edible) | 30–90 min | 30–90 min |
## The THC:CBD Ratio
Most regulated cannabis products list both cannabinoids on the label. The ratio between them changes the experience:
- **High THC, low CBD** (e.g., 20:1): Classic recreational cannabis experience. Strong psychoactive effects, higher risk of anxiety at higher doses.
- **Balanced 1:1**: Often described as clearer-headed than THC-dominant. CBD appears to modulate some of THC's more intense effects.
- **High CBD, low THC** (e.g., 1:20): Minimal intoxication but full plant chemistry. Often preferred by new consumers and those seeking non-psychoactive effects.
The 1:1 ratio in particular has become popular among adults who find pure THC too intense. This is a personal preference question, not a right-or-wrong, and individual response varies.
## What Neither Should Do
Under New York law, licensed cannabis retailers cannot make medical claims about THC or CBD products. "Cures," "treats," "heals", none of these are permissible on packaging or in advertising. Consumer anecdotes exist in both directions, but the regulated retail framework treats all such claims as unverified.
If you are considering either compound for a health reason, talk to a licensed clinician. Some users report benefits; the research base is developing; and individual response varies significantly.
## Where to Go Next
- [What Is Cannabis? A Complete Beginner's Guide](/blog/what-is-cannabis-a-complete-beginners-guide)
- [What Are Cannabinoids?](/blog/what-are-cannabinoids-a-deep-dive-into-thc-cbd-cbn-cbg-and-more)
- Full-Spectrum vs Broad-Spectrum vs Isolate CBD
- [Cannabis Dosing Guide](/blog/cannabis-dosing-guide-how-much-should-you-take)
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*This article is consumer education for adults 21+. Nothing here is medical, legal, or financial advice. Cannabis laws vary by state, always verify your state's current rules and, for health questions, consult a licensed clinician. For regulated New York retail, verify licensing via the OCM QR-code system at [cannabis.ny.gov](https://cannabis.ny.gov).*