French authorities will officially prohibit the sale of CBD edibles starting May 15. This sudden crackdown stems from a strict new interpretation of European Union Novel Food regulations and threatens to severely disrupt the nation's €100 million hemp-derived food supplement market.
The ban is not driven by new domestic legislation. Instead, France's Directorate-General for Food is enforcing recent provisional thresholds established by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA).
The EFSA recently set a highly restrictive safe intake level of 0.0275 mg per kilogram of body weight per day. For an average 70-kilogram adult, this equates to roughly 2 mg of CBD daily. Because CBD was not consumed in significant quantities in the EU before May 1997, it is classified as a "novel food."
Currently, no CBD-containing product has received EFSA approval for sale, despite over 200 pending applications across the bloc.
The enforcement plan, presented to industry groups in mid-April, puts numerous businesses at risk of immediate product recalls. Affected retail items include:
- CBD gummies and snacks
- Sublingual CBD oils and capsules
- CBD-infused beverages
According to the Union of Industries for the Valorization of Hemp Extracts (UIVEC), the ban will impact a massive domestic supply chain. This includes 2,000 hemp producers, 20,000 pharmacies, and 1,500 dedicated CBD shops.
In response, industry leaders are urgently calling for an emergency meeting with government ministries. They are requesting rules that would allow compliant operators to continue business while the lengthy EU Novel Food approval process remains pending.
This move deepens France's historically restrictive stance on cannabis. While recreational cannabis remains illegal and medical use is tightly controlled, France paradoxically stands as the EU’s leading industrial hemp producer, generating over 60% of the bloc's crop.
Previous attempts by French authorities to ban retail sales of CBD flowers and leaves in 2021 were overturned following the landmark 2020 Kanavape case, where the EU Court of Justice ruled that CBD is not a narcotic. Given the provisional nature of the EFSA's new food thresholds, this latest ban on edibles is highly likely to prompt new legal challenges.

