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The Complete Guide to CBG: What Cannabigerol Is and Why It Matters

By the Kaw Valley Cannabis team · Last updated 2026-05-23 · 8 min read

Introduction

Walk into any wellness store today and you'll find shelves stacked with CBD products. But behind that crowded category, a quieter cannabinoid has been working its way into the spotlight — and unlike CBD, most shoppers can't even pronounce it yet. CBG, or cannabigerol, is the cannabinoid that researchers, formulators, and informed consumers have started calling "the mother of all cannabinoids." That nickname isn't marketing — it's biology. Every other cannabinoid in the hemp plant, including CBD and THC, starts its life as CBG.

This guide walks through what CBG actually is, how it's different from the cannabinoids you've already heard of, why it's been so hard to produce at scale, and what to look for if you're considering trying a CBG product for the first time. It's written for anyone curious about hemp who wants the real story without the noise.

CBG defined: the precursor cannabinoid

Cannabigerol, abbreviated CBG, is one of more than 100 naturally occurring cannabinoids in the Cannabis sativa plant. What makes CBG distinct is its position in the plant's biochemistry. Inside the living hemp plant, CBG begins life as CBGA (cannabigerolic acid). As the plant matures, enzymes convert CBGA into THCA, CBDA, and CBCA — the acidic precursors of THC, CBD, and CBC. In other words, every familiar cannabinoid is a downstream product of CBG.

That biological role is why CBG is sometimes described as the stem cell of the cannabinoid family. By the time most hemp plants reach harvest, the CBG content has been almost entirely converted into other cannabinoids — typically less than 1% of the dry weight of a mature plant. Producing CBG at meaningful scale therefore requires either harvesting plants earlier than usual, breeding strains specifically for higher CBG content, or extracting from large quantities of biomass to concentrate small amounts.

CBG is non-intoxicating

CBG is one of the non-intoxicating cannabinoids. It does not produce the high associated with THC. The mechanism is different: CBG interacts with the body's endocannabinoid system through receptors in a way that researchers describe as modulatory rather than psychoactive. This is part of why CBG has drawn interest from people who want to explore cannabinoids without any intoxicating effect.

Because CBG is non-intoxicating, hemp-derived CBG products are federally legal under the 2018 Farm Bill (and the 2026 Farm Bill that followed), provided the final product contains less than 0.3% delta-9 THC by dry weight. As of November 12, 2026, federal rules also apply a 0.4 milligram total-THC-per-container cap, which CBG isolate (with 0% THC) easily meets.

How CBG is extracted and produced

Producing CBG starts at the farm. Hemp cultivators select strains bred for elevated CBG content and time the harvest to capture peak CBG before too much of it converts into other cannabinoids. At Kaw Valley Cannabis, the farm in Lawrence, Kansas controls this process from seed to extraction — a vertically integrated approach that's still rare in the industry.

After harvest, the plant material is processed through either CO₂ or alcohol-based extraction. Both methods pull cannabinoids and terpenes from the plant biomass into a concentrated form. From there, the extract is refined through distillation and chromatography to isolate CBG from the other cannabinoids that came along for the ride. The end product, in its purest form, is a fine crystalline powder that can be 99% or more pure CBG.

That powder is the raw material for everything else — isolate sold as a finished product, water-soluble formulations like nano micelle CBG, and ingredients sold to formulators who build their own finished products.

CBG product formats: what's out there

CBG shows up in several different consumer formats. The right format depends on how you plan to use it.

What to look for in a quality CBG product

CBG is still a maturing market, and quality varies widely between brands. A few signals separate the serious producers from the rest.

Frequently asked questions

Is CBG the same as CBD?

No. CBG and CBD are distinct cannabinoids. CBG is the precursor that converts into CBD (and other cannabinoids) as the plant matures. Chemically and biologically they're different molecules that interact with the body in different ways. For a deeper comparison, see CBG vs CBD: Five Differences Every Wellness Shopper Should Understand.

Is CBG legal?

Hemp-derived CBG containing less than 0.3% delta-9 THC is federally legal in the United States under the Farm Bill. Some states have additional restrictions — Kansas, for example, requires hemp products sold in-state to contain 0% THC. CBG isolate, which contains no THC at all, meets every state requirement.

Will CBG show up on a drug test?

Pure CBG (such as CBG isolate) should not trigger a standard drug test, which screens for THC and its metabolites. However, full-spectrum hemp products can contain trace THC, which in theory could produce a positive result. People subject to drug testing should choose CBG isolate or products with a COA showing 0.00% THC.

How long has CBG been studied?

CBG was first isolated in 1964 by the same research team that identified CBD and THC. Compared to CBD, however, formal CBG research is still in its earlier stages — partly because the cannabinoid was harder to produce in usable quantities until recent advances in cultivation and extraction.

Final word

CBG has spent decades in the shadow of CBD and THC, but the cannabinoid that quietly produces both is finally getting its own moment. Whether you're new to hemp or you've been a CBD user looking for something different, CBG is worth understanding on its own terms. The best starting point is a product made by a brand that controls its own supply chain and shows its work — a third-party lab COA, clear potency numbers, and no overhyped claims.

Explore Kaw Valley Cannabis's Nano Micelle CBG and 99.5% Pure CBG Isolate, both made on our family farm in Lawrence, Kansas, and third-party tested for purity.

This article is for educational purposes; CBG is not a substitute for medical care. The statements made regarding these products have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. Consult your physician before adding any new supplement to your routine, especially if you take prescription medication.