TheBerkshiresCannabis Club

Education

THCA Explained: What It Is and Why It's Trending

A plain-English guide to what is THCA: what adults 21+ should know, how to think about it, and where to go for the next level of detail.

·2 min read
THCA Explained: What It Is and Why It's Trending
## The Short Answer THCA (tetrahydrocannabinolic acid) is the non-intoxicating precursor to THC in raw cannabis. Heat converts it to THC through a process called decarboxylation. For adults 21 and older, THCA is interesting for two reasons: it's the form of "THC" present in fresh cannabis (and on a COA, often listed separately from Delta-9 THC), and it's at the center of a legal trend in the hemp-derived product market. ## What THCA Does THCA on its own is non-intoxicating. It binds cannabinoid receptors poorly because of its larger molecular structure. Heat removes a carboxyl group, decarboxylation, and converts it to Delta-9 THC, which is intoxicating. This is why eating raw cannabis doesn't produce a high, but smoking it does. The combustion or heating step does the conversion. ## Reading THCA on a COA On a Certificate of Analysis for flower, you'll often see separate THC and THCA percentages. Total THC is calculated as: **Total THC = Delta-9 THC + (THCA × 0.877)** The 0.877 factor accounts for mass loss during decarboxylation. Why this matters: a flower listed as "2 percent Delta-9 THC" may have 22 percent THCA, which becomes roughly 19 percent total THC when consumed. The total THC is the number that matters for consumer experience. ## The Hemp-Derived THCA Trend The 2018 Farm Bill defines hemp by Delta-9 THC content (under 0.3 percent dry weight). THCA is not Delta-9 THC, so a flower with very high THCA but low Delta-9 THC can technically meet the federal hemp definition, while still producing a strong high when smoked or heated. This has created a hemp-derived "THCA flower" market that operates in a legal gray zone, with products often sold through non-dispensary channels. New York and several other states have acted to close this loophole; other states have not. Federal enforcement is inconsistent. Consumer safety: as with Delta-8, the issue isn't THCA itself but the regulatory oversight. Unregulated products have less lab-testing rigor. ## Raw-Cannabis THCA Claims Some consumers juice raw cannabis leaves or use THCA-specific tinctures for non-intoxicating supplementation. Claims about benefits are varied; research is limited. No medical claims follow from the non-intoxicating nature of THCA. ## Where to Go Next Related reading: [delta-8 THC vs delta-9 THC](/blog/delta-8-thc-vs-delta-9-thc-legal-status-effects-and-safety), [decarboxylation explained](/blog/decarboxylation-explained-why-you-need-to-heat-cannabis-before-cooking), and [hemp vs marijuana legal definitions](/blog/hemp-vs-marijuana-legal-definitions-and-why-they-matter). --- *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).*