Harrelson’s Own is a CBD oral spray containing five ingredients: full spectrum hemp extract, purified water, soy lecithin, and an organic mint and vanilla terpene blend. The formula delivers 600 mg of CBD per bottle, with roughly 20 mg per three pumps.
The Full Ingredient List
The ingredient list is short compared to many CBD products on the market. Here’s what’s in it:
- Full spectrum hemp extract: This is the active ingredient providing CBD along with other naturally occurring compounds from the hemp plant, including trace amounts of THC (under 0.3%).
- Purified water: The base of the spray formula.
- Soy lecithin: An emulsifier that helps the oil-based hemp extract mix evenly into the water so each spray delivers a consistent dose.
- Organic mint and vanilla terpene blend: Provides the flavor and, according to the company, contributes additional effects related to mood, energy, and stress relief.
There are no artificial sweeteners, synthetic additives, or preservatives listed. The company states the product is “organically made without one synthetically modified ingredient.”
What “Full Spectrum” Means Here
Full spectrum hemp extract contains CBD alongside other cannabinoids, terpenes, and plant compounds naturally found in the hemp plant. This differs from CBD isolate, which strips everything away except pure CBD. The idea behind full spectrum products is the “entourage effect,” where the various hemp compounds work together rather than in isolation.
Because Harrelson’s Own uses full spectrum extract, it contains trace amounts of THC. The level stays below 0.3%, which is the federal legal threshold set by the 2018 Farm Bill. That amount is too small to produce any intoxicating effect, but it could potentially show up on extremely sensitive drug tests depending on how much you use and how frequently.
How Much CBD Per Spray
Each bottle contains 600 mg of CBD total. Three pumps of the spray deliver approximately 20 mg of CBD, which falls in the moderate range for a single serving. That means a full bottle provides roughly 30 servings at the standard three-pump dose. If you use less per serving, the bottle stretches further.
The spray format is designed to be absorbed through the tissues in your mouth rather than swallowed and processed through your digestive system. This generally allows the CBD to reach your bloodstream faster than capsules or edibles, though individual results vary.
Sourcing and Testing
The hemp in Harrelson’s Own is grown on farms in Kentucky that the company describes as “organic practicing.” That phrasing is worth noting. It means the farms follow organic growing methods but may not hold official USDA organic certification, which requires a formal audit process.
For quality control, the company uses a third-party lab called Eurofins to test the finished product. Eurofins analyzes for cannabinoid potency (confirming the CBD content matches what’s on the label), bacterial contamination, heavy metals, and pesticide residues. Third-party testing is considered a baseline standard in the CBD industry, since the FDA does not approve or regulate CBD supplements the way it does prescription drugs.
The Terpene Blend
Terpenes are aromatic compounds found naturally in many plants, not just hemp. They’re responsible for the scent of lavender, the sharpness of black pepper, and the freshness of mint. In Harrelson’s Own, the terpene blend uses mint and vanilla to flavor the spray and mask the earthy taste that hemp extract tends to have on its own.
The company claims its terpene blend is “mood-elevating, stress and pain-relieving, focused driven and energy increasing.” Some research does support mild biological effects from certain terpenes, particularly when combined with cannabinoids, but those claims go well beyond what most clinical evidence has established. The terpenes primarily serve as flavoring in a product like this.
What’s Not in It
Harrelson’s Own keeps its formula minimal. There are no carrier oils like MCT or hemp seed oil, which are common in tincture-style CBD products. There’s no melatonin, no added vitamins, and no herbal extracts beyond the terpene blend. The soy lecithin is the only additive beyond the hemp extract itself, and it serves a functional purpose as an emulsifier rather than a nutritional one. If you have a soy allergy, this is the ingredient to flag.

