Does THC Percentage Matter? | The Canna Bar NJ

For informational purposes only — not medical advice.

A Report by The Canna Bar

Does THC Percentage
Really Matter?

You walk into the dispensary. You sort the menu by THC. You grab the highest number. We get it — most people do. But recent research says that habit might be costing you a better experience. Here's why the biggest number on the label isn't always the best product on the shelf.

Why Higher THC Doesn't Mean a Better High

The THC Trap

I smoked for over 20 years and always grabbed the highest THC on the menu. Every single time. It wasn't until a few years ago — when I stopped chasing the highest number and started paying attention to the full profile — that everything changed. Strains I never would have picked before hit harder, lasted longer, and felt cleaner than the ones I used to grab purely for the percentage. Turns out, the research backs that up.

01

The 2,100-Person Review

A 2026 review of 21 clinical trials found that high-THC groups didn't get better results than placebo for pain — but they did get more side effects like dizziness and drowsiness. You're paying more for the same benefit plus the downsides.

Systematic Review, 2026
4% → 16%

How We Got Here

In the mid-'90s, cannabis averaged about 4% THC. Today it's over 16% — and concentrates go way higher. But while THC went up, CBD and other beneficial compounds didn't keep pace. The stuff got stronger on paper, but not necessarily more balanced or enjoyable.

Even UCSF — one of the top medical schools in the country — is running clinical trials right now on what high-potency THC actually does to your brain. They're not testing whether more THC feels better. They're testing whether it causes harm. That tells you where the science is heading.

90%
Chasing the Number
closeTHC: 90%+ (distillates, isolates)
closeOther compounds: mostly stripped out
closeHigher side effects, not higher satisfaction

Think of it like alcohol proof: 190-proof grain alcohol is technically "stronger" than a well-made bourbon, but nobody calls it better. Past the sweet spot, you're just getting more side effects.

25%
Shopping by Profile, Not Just %
checkLook at terpenes, CBD, and cannabinoid balance
checkFull chemical profile stays intact (flower, live resin)
checkThe high depends on more than one number

A 2025 analysis found full-spectrum products required about 40% lower doses than isolates to achieve similar effects. CBD can take the edge off anxiety and racing thoughts. The point isn't to chase low THC — it's to stop letting one number make the decision for you.

Real Talk from Our Team

We've Been There Too

"I've smoked cannabis for more than 40 years — some very good, some very bad. Like most people, I used to chase the highest THC on the menu. A majority of our customers still do. Most want something over 25%, up to 35%. Anything under that? They'd laugh at it."

"Then we added Brighterside Farms to our menu — soil-grown, organically fed, and honestly one of the best in New Jersey. I recently smoked their Trainwreck strain at 18.75% THC. The effects could go up against a 35% product easily. Most people would never pick it based on the number alone — and that's exactly the problem."

"Once customers are educated on terpenes, cannabinoids, the endocannabinoid system, and the entourage effect, they stop chasing THC percentages. The number on the label doesn't tell you how it's going to feel."

— The Canna Bar Team

Try It Yourself: Brighterside Farms Trainwreck

At 18.75% THC, this soil-grown strain from Brighterside Farms proves the point better than any study. Rich terpene profile, clean effects, and a high that competes with products twice the percentage. Available now at The Canna Bar. Ask our budtenders about it — or any Brighterside Farms product on our menu.

Meet Brighterside Farms

Brighterside Farms grows cannabis the way it should be grown — in real soil, fed organically, with no shortcuts. Their flower is some of the cleanest, most flavorful product available in New Jersey, and it's a perfect example of why the full plant profile matters more than a THC number.

Their Trainwreck strain at 18.75% THC is proof that how it's grown and what's in the profile matters more than what's on the label. Available now on our menu at The Canna Bar.

Brighterside Farms — London Pound Cake. Soil-grown, organically fed. Available at The Canna Bar.

What to Do Instead

Stop Sorting by
THC Alone

Your high isn't just about THC. It's about your tolerance, the terpenes in the product, whether there's CBD in the mix, how you're consuming it, and even your mood that day. THC is one ingredient — not the whole recipe. A 22% strain with a great terpene profile can feel better than a 35% strain that's been stripped of everything else.

Tell Us What You Want to Feel

Instead of asking "what's the strongest?", try telling our budtenders what kind of experience you're looking for. Relaxed and sleepy? Focused and creative? Social and uplifted? We'll point you to strains where the full profile matches your goal — not just the THC number.

Talk to Our Budtenders

Look at the Whole Label

Check for terpenes like myrcene (body relaxation), limonene (mood lift), or caryophyllene (calm without sedation). Look at the CBD content too. A product with some CBD alongside THC often produces a smoother, less anxious high. The science backs this up — and you'll probably notice the difference on the first try.

Read Beyond the %

Why the Whole Plant Matters

A

Cannabis Has Hundreds of Compounds

THC gets all the attention, but the plant produces hundreds of other compounds — terpenes (the stuff you smell), CBD, minor cannabinoids like CBG and CBN, and flavonoids. There's a theory called the "entourage effect" that says these compounds work together, and the combination shapes your experience more than any single one. Think of it like food: a tomato is more than just sugar and water — the flavor comes from everything working together.

B

We'll Be Honest — It's Not Fully Proven Yet

We're not going to oversell you. The entourage effect is a promising idea, but as of 2025, the human research is still catching up. Some lab studies support it, others don't. What we can say is that it's consistent with what thousands of customers actually report: strains with a good terpene profile and balanced cannabinoids tend to produce better, more well-rounded highs — even at lower THC numbers. That's real-world experience backed by a plausible scientific theory, even if the final proof isn't in yet.

C

What the Science Does Support

A few things are well-supported: CBD can take the edge off THC — reducing anxiety and paranoia for many people. Full-spectrum products (where nothing is stripped out) appear to require lower doses than pure THC isolates to get similar results. And the direction of the industry is clear — federal research agencies are investing in understanding minor cannabinoids and terpenes, and the cutting edge of cannabis science in 2026 is focused on finding the right balance, not pushing THC higher.

M
L
P
C
25%THC
M = Myrcene   L = Limonene   P = Pinene   C = Caryophyllene

Your best high isn't the highest number.

Next time you're at The Canna Bar, try something different. Instead of grabbing the highest THC on the menu, tell our budtenders what you actually want to feel. We'll help you find a product where the full profile — not just the percentage — works for you. You might be surprised at how much better a balanced product hits compared to a one-dimensional THC bomb.

Sources

  1. Bidwell et al. (2020). Association of Naturalistic Administration of Cannabis Flower and Concentrates With Intoxication and Impairment. JAMA Psychiatry.
  2. D'Souza et al. (2016). Rapid Changes in CB1 Receptor Availability in Cannabis Dependent Males. Biological Psychiatry.
  3. CDC. About Cannabis. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
  4. NIDA. Cannabis Potency Data. National Institute on Drug Abuse.
  5. Russo, E.B. (2011). Taming THC: potential cannabis synergy and phytocannabinoid-terpenoid entourage effects. British Journal of Pharmacology.
  6. Boehnke et al. (2023). Decoding the Postulated Entourage Effect of Medicinal Cannabis. Int. J. Mol. Sci.
  7. Niesink & van Laar (2013). Does Cannabidiol Protect Against Adverse Psychological Effects of THC? Frontiers in Psychiatry.
  8. Santiago et al. (2019). Terpenoids From Cannabis Do Not Mediate an Entourage Effect by Acting at Cannabinoid Receptors. PLOS ONE.
  9. Systematic review of 21 clinical trials (2026). Cannabis vs placebo for pain relief. New York Post, Jan 2026.
  10. Meta-analysis (2025). Cannabis use and depression risk. Psychological Medicine.
  11. 2025 Cannabis Clinical Outcomes Conference. Proceedings. PMC.
  12. UCSF Clinical Trials (2026). High-potency THC and cognitive effects in young adults.
  13. Full-spectrum vs isolate dosing (2025). Entourage Effect: Whole-Plant Medicine. CBHD News.
BALANCE
How to Shop With Us In-store we accept: Cash & Debit