Hemp extracts: what the labels mean

This page explains common hemp extract terms so staff, buyers, and shareholders can scan a package or deck without guessing. It pairs with the PotNetwork Holdings homepage for ticker context, the About page for structure, and the Brands directory where individual labels live.

Industrial hemp field used for fiber and cannabinoid feedstock

Three extract families you will see on shelf

Full-spectrum oils keep a wide cannabinoid and terpene profile from the plant, still within federal hemp limits on delta-9 THC where the product is sold. They are popular in tinctures where buyers want the whole-plant chemical spread, not a single isolated compound.

Broad-spectrum formulas start from a similar starting material but strip THC to non-detect or near-zero levels while leaving other cannabinoids in place. Retailers in strict testing markets often ask for this middle path.

Isolate powders or liquids refine CBD (or another target cannabinoid) down to a high purity slice. They are easy to meter into gummies, drinks, or topicals when the goal is predictable potency and neutral flavor.

How coa reading supports trust

A certificate of analysis from a third-party lab should list cannabinoids per serving or per gram, residual solvents, heavy metals, and micro counts. When a store manager asks for paperwork, the same coa should match the lot code printed on the bottle. That match is a simple control any holding group can insist on across subsidiaries.

Five steps for a clean retail conversation

  1. Confirm the product is labeled as hemp with a supplement or cosmetic pathway that fits your state.
  2. Ask for the coa and check that the sample ID lines up with the packaging date or batch.
  3. Compare milligrams per serving to the price per milligram so shoppers can judge value honestly.
  4. Note age-gating and signage rules for inhalable formats, which differ widely by jurisdiction.
  5. Point curious investors to the Investor Guide and dated items in Press Releases for corporate updates rather than rumor.

Subsidiaries under PotNetwork Holdings have shipped oils, gummies, vape components, and pet SKUs. The mix changes with regulation, but the vocabulary above stays stable. If you need a who-owns-what map, open Subsidiaries after you finish here.

Next clicks on this site

Return to the homepage for stock tiles and featured news. Use Contact for customer or media routing. This guide is informational only and does not replace legal advice for any market you serve.

View brand portfolio