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    Hemp Extract Potency Explained: How to Compare MG Across Products

    Jenna Renz

    Apr 28, 2026

    8 min read

    Hemp extract potency explained in one sentence: milligrams (mg) only make sense when you know what they’re measuring (

    fda.gov/food/nutrition-education-resources-materials/sodium-your-diet" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank" style="background-color: transparent; color: rgb(145, 27, 164);">per serving vs per bottle), how you’re taking it (gummy vs tincture vs vape), and which cannabinoid it is (CBD and delta-9 are not the same party).


    If you’ve ever stared at “25mg gummies” and “1000mg tincture” like they’re written in ancient runes, you’re not alone. Brands love big numbers. Your body loves context. Let’s give it some.


    Start Here: What “MG” Actually Means (And What It Doesn’t)

    “MG” is just milligrams of a compound (CBD, delta-9 THC, delta-8 THC, CBG, etc.). That’s it.

    What mg does not automatically tell you:

    • How strong it will feel
    • How fast it will kick in
    • How long it will last
    • Whether it will make you sleepy, calm, chatty, or convinced your couch is hugging you


    To compare products, you must answer two questions every time:

    • MG per serving: How much you take in one dose
    • MG per container: How much is in the entire bottle/bag


    If you skip this step, you will either underdose, overdose, or angrily conclude “this stuff doesn’t work” while holding the wrong end of the measuring tape.



    The Two MG Numbers That Matter: Per Serving vs Per Bottle

    MG per serving (the only number your body cares about)

    This is what you get in a single gummy, a single dropper, a single capsule, or a single mL.


    Examples:

    • “25mg per gummy” means each gummy contains 25mg of the listed cannabinoid(s).
    • “25mg/mL” means each 1 mL serving contains 25mg.


    MG per bottle (the number your wallet cares about)

    This tells you total cannabinoids inside the container, which helps compare value.


    Examples:

    • A tincture labeled “1000mg” usually means 1000mg total in the bottle.
    • A bag labeled “500mg” gummies usually means 500mg total in the whole bag.


    Sneaky detail: a “1000mg tincture” can be weak or strong depending on bottle size. Yes, really.


    The Fast Way to Compare Anything: Convert Everything to MG per Serving

    Make “mg per serving” your universal language.


    Gummies and capsules

    Easy, because servings are discrete.

    • 25mg gummy = 25mg per serving
    • 10mg capsule = 10mg per serving


    Tinctures and oils

    You need two numbers:

    • Total mg in bottle
    • Bottle volume in mL


    Formula:

    mg per mL = total mg ÷ total mL

    Common example:

    • 1000mg in a 30mL bottle
    • 1000 ÷ 30 = 33.3mg/mL

    Now you can compare it to a gummy, because you know the dose per 1 mL.


    “25mg/mL” oils

    Already done for you. That label means:

    • 1 mL serving = 25mg
    • 0.5 mL serving = 12.5mg
    • 0.25 mL serving = 6.25mg


    Simple. Gloriously simple.


    Then Comes the Plot Twist: Bioavailability (AKA “How Much You Actually Absorb”)

    Two products can both be “25mg,” and one can feel like a whisper while the other feels like a full conversation. That’s because bioavailability varies by format.


    Typical ranges (these are broad, but useful):

    • Gummies/edibles: ~6 to 10%
    • Tinctures (sublingual): ~12 to 35%
    • Inhalation (vape/smoke): ~50 to 70%


    Your goal is not to memorize these. Your goal is to stop assuming that “25mg is 25mg” in real-world effects.


    A simple “absorbed mg” estimate

    If you want a rough comparison, estimate:

    absorbed mg = labeled mg × bioavailability


    Example: 25mg labeled dose

    • Gummy at 8%: 25 × 0.08 = 2mg absorbed (approx.)
    • Tincture at 25%: 25 × 0.25 = 6.25mg absorbed (approx.)
    • Inhalation at 60%: 25 × 0.60 = 15mg absorbed (approx.)


    Same label. Very different ride.


    Important: bioavailability depends on your body, what you ate, how you dose, and product formulation. Use this for comparison, not as gospel carved into stone.


    Why a 25mg Delta-9 Gummy Hits Differently Than 25mg CBD

    Now we address the most common misunderstanding in hemp shopping: mg is not a universal unit of “strength” across cannabinoids.


    CBD (cannabidiol)

    CBD is typically non-intoxicating. Many people use it for calm, recovery, stress support, or sleep routines. A “25mg CBD gummy” is usually not meant to feel like a “high.” If you’re expecting fireworks, you will write an angry review. Don’t do that. It’s not the product’s job to be something else.


    Delta-9 THC (hemp-derived where legal)

    Delta-9 THC is intoxicating. A “25mg delta-9 gummy” can be very strong for many users, especially if you’re not tolerant. For some people, 5 to 10mg is plenty.


    So yes:

    • 25mg CBD and 25mg delta-9 THC are not comparable experiences.
    • The label uses the same unit, but your nervous system reads a completely different language.


    Delta-8 THC and other intoxicating cannabinoids

    Delta-8 THC is also intoxicating, often described as “milder” by some users, but dose response still varies wildly. Treat it with the same respect you’d give any THC product.


    If you’re comparing potency, always ask: 25mg of what? CBD, delta-9, delta-8, CBN blends, THCA pre-rolls that convert to THC when heated. The compound matters. A lot.


    The Only Comparisons That Are Actually Fair

    To compare products without getting fooled by packaging, compare these three things:

    • Cannabinoid type (CBD vs delta-9 THC vs delta-8 THC, etc.)
    • MG per serving (your dose)
    • Delivery method (gummy vs tincture vs inhalation)


    If any of those change, the experience can change even if the mg looks identical.

    Repeat it with me: type, serving, method. Type, serving, method.


    Common Product Labels, Translated Into Plain English

    “25mg gummies”

    Usually means 25mg per gummy. Check the bag:

    • If it says “15 gummies, 25mg each,” total is 375mg per bag.
    • If it says “30 gummies, 25mg each,” total is 750mg per bag.


    “1000mg tincture”

    Usually means 1000mg total in the bottle, not per dropper.


    You still need bottle size and serving size. Many tinctures are 30mL with a 1mL dropper, so:

    • 1000mg ÷ 30mL = 33.3mg per mL (per dropper)


    But if the bottle is 60mL:

    • 1000mg ÷ 60mL = 16.7mg per mL


    Same “1000mg” headline. Half the concentration. This is why people get confused.


    It's important to understand that these compounds can have varying effects on individuals due to factors such as individual biochemistry, tolerance levels, and even the specific strain or product used.


    “25mg/mL oil”

    This is concentration. If the bottle is 30mL:

    • 25mg/mL × 30mL = 750mg total


    So a “25mg/mL” oil in 30mL is 750mg per bottle, even though the front label might emphasize the per-mL number.


    A Simple Comparison

    Here’s how three common labels compare when you break them down into “mg per serving” and a rough estimate of what your body might actually absorb.


    A 25mg gummy typically contains 25mg in a single piece, but after digestion and first-pass metabolism, the amount that may actually be absorbed is usually around 1.5 to 2.5mg (about 6–10%). A 1000mg tincture (30mL bottle) contains 1000mg total across the full bottle, which works out to roughly 33.3mg per 1mL dropper serving, with an estimated absorbed range of about 4 to 12mg depending on factors like metabolism and whether it’s taken with food. A 25mg/mL oil delivers 25mg per 1mL serving, with a typical absorbed range of about 3 to 9mg (around 12–35%).


    Think of this as more of a flashlight than a crystal ball—helpful for direction, but your body still has the final say.



    How to Pick Your Target Dose (Without Guessing Like It’s a Game Show)

    You need a target dose for the specific cannabinoid and the specific format.


    Step 1: Decide what you’re taking

    Be specific:

    • CBD only?
    • Delta-9 THC only?
    • A blend (CBD + THC, CBD + CBN, etc.)?

    Never assume. Read the label. Be nosy.


    Step 2: Start low, then move up (yes, it’s boring; do it anyway)

    General dosing logic most people can live with:

    For CBD (non-intoxicating for most users):

    • Start: 10 to 25mg per serving
    • Adjust: increase by 5 to 15mg every few days based on response


    For delta-9 THC (intoxicating):

    • Start: 1 to 2.5mg
    • Typical: 2.5 to 10mg
    • Strong for many: 10mg+
    • 25mg: often very strong for low-tolerance users


    If you’re new to THC edibles, do not start at 25mg unless you enjoy learning life lessons the hard way.


    Step 3: Match the format to your goal

    Different formats behave differently.


    Want longer-lasting effects?

    Choose gummies/edibles. They take longer to kick in and last longer.


    Want more control and faster adjustment?

    Choose tinctures. You can change dose in smaller increments.


    Want the fastest onset?

    Inhalation is fastest, and it is also easiest to overdo. Respect it.


    Step 4: Use this “effective dose” mindset

    Instead of asking “How many mg is strong?” ask:

    • How many mg per serving am I taking?
    • Roughly what percentage might I absorb with this format?
    • How does that compare to what I took last time?


    Consistency beats vibes.


    Practical Examples (Because This Is Where People Get Stuck)

    Example 1: 25mg gummy vs 1000mg tincture

    You’re choosing between:

    • Gummies: 25mg each
    • Tincture: 1000mg total


    If the tincture is 30mL, it’s ~33mg per dropper. That is already more than one gummy on the label.


    But effects may still differ because:

    • gummies often absorb less and kick in slower
    • tincture may absorb more and feel more controllable


    So the right comparison is:

    • 1 gummy = 25mg (edible)
    • 0.75 dropper of 33mg/mL tincture ≈ 25mg (sublingual), if you want to match labeled mg
    • then adjust based on how it feels for you


    Example 2: “I took 25mg CBD and felt nothing”

    That might be normal. CBD is not designed to feel like THC. You may still choose to adjust dose or format, but first confirm you are comparing the right expectation to the right cannabinoid.


    Example 3: “25mg delta-9 gummy felt way stronger than expected”

    Also normal. Many people do well at 2.5 to 10mg delta-9. If 25mg felt intense, that’s not you being “bad at edibles.” That’s you being human.


    Next time:

    • try 2.5 to 5mg
    • wait long enough before re-dosing (edibles are slow and petty)

    Don’t Get Tricked by These Label Games

    “Total hemp extract” vs “total cannabinoids”

    Some labels hype “hemp extract” milligrams, which can include non-cannabinoid plant material.


    If you want potency, look for:

    • mg of CBD
    • mg of delta-9 THC
    • mg of other named cannabinoids


    If it’s not named, don’t assume.


    “Per bottle” headlines

    Big total numbers sell. That’s marketing’s job. Your job is to find mg per serving and servings per container.


    Serving size shenanigans

    Sometimes a “serving” is half a gummy, one gummy, or two gummies. Sometimes a tincture serving is 0.5mL instead of 1mL.


    Do not trust vibes. Trust serving size.


    Quick Rules for Confident Potency Comparisons

    • Compare mg per serving, not just mg per bottle.
    • Confirm the cannabinoid type. CBD and delta-9 are not interchangeable.
    • Factor in format bioavailability. Gummies are usually less efficient than tinctures; inhalation is typically highest.
    • Start low. Go slow. Repeat, repeat, repeat.
    • If you change format, consider lowering the dose even if the mg looks the same.


    


    Ready to Shop Without Guessing?

    Now you know what those numbers actually mean, how to convert them into apples-to-apples servings, and why format and cannabinoid type matter as much as the mg itself.


    Shop all hemp products and use the dosage guide sidebar to pick a serving that matches your comfort level and your goal. Choose the right mg. Choose the right format. Then enjoy the rare pleasure of clicking “add to cart” with confidence.


    FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions)

    What does 'mg' mean on hemp extract products?

    'Mg' stands for milligrams of a specific compound like CBD, delta-9 THC, or others; it indicates the amount of that cannabinoid but doesn't tell you how strong the effect will be or how fast it kicks in.


    Why is it important to know mg per serving versus mg per bottle?

    Mg per serving tells you how much cannabinoid you get in one dose, which affects your body directly, while mg per bottle shows the total amount in the container and helps you compare value between products.


    How can I compare potency between gummies and tinctures?

    Convert everything to mg per serving: for gummies, it's straightforward (e.g., 25mg per gummy), and for tinctures, divide total mg by total mL to find mg per mL, enabling an apples-to-apples comparison.


    What role does bioavailability play in hemp extract potency?

    Bioavailability determines how much of the labeled mg your body actually absorbs; it varies by product type—about 6-10% for edibles, 12-35% for tinctures, and 50-70% for inhalation methods—meaning labeled mg isn't always equal to effective dose.


    Why does a 25mg delta-9 THC gummy feel different from a 25mg CBD gummy?

    Because delta-9 THC is intoxicating and affects your body differently than non-intoxicating CBD; thus, the same mg amount doesn't translate to similar effects or strength between these cannabinoids.


    Can I rely solely on the mg number to judge hemp product strength?

    No; mg numbers alone don't indicate how strong or fast-acting a product is because factors like cannabinoid type, dosage form, bioavailability, and individual body response all influence the real-world effect.

    Jenna Renz

    Jenna Renz

    Jenna is a California-based creative copywriter who’s been lucky enough to have worked with a diverse range of clients before settling into the cannabis industry to explore her two greatest passions: writing and weed.