Type your business name. HempOS pulls your public record, counts the products and COAs anyone can find, and grades how exposed you are today. No fabrication — just the numbers already published under your name.
Reads only public data — your public web presence and the Texas hemp directory. Press Enter to grade the best match.
Texas' total-THC rule is in force now, and the federal hemp definition is expected to change November 12, 2026. Every day your record sits unpublished is a day an inspector or buyer can look you up and find nothing to verify.
Your business is already in the Texas hemp directory. Claim it and your products, COAs, and public verification pages start filling in today — before the November 12 deadline.
Claim your listing free →Set up your COA vault and product records now, at your own pace, so inspection day is a one-tap answer instead of a scramble.
Start free accountWant a rep to walk your record with you and show what to fix first? Book a short call while there's still runway before the rule change.
Book a 15-min callIt's a free tool that looks up your business in the public Texas hemp record, counts the products and COAs anyone can find, and grades how exposed you are if a DSHS inspector or a buyer checks you today. It takes about 60 seconds and needs no account.
Yes. The scorecard is free and requires no account. You can optionally enter your email to have the full report sent to you and to schedule a free rep walkthrough.
It reads only public information — your own public web presence and the Texas hemp business directory. The counts of products and COAs shown are the real numbers we found published for your business, not estimates.
No. The scorecard is informational and is not legal advice. Verify any compliance decision with your lab and your own counsel.
An empty public record is itself the most common exposure — an inspector or buyer who looks you up finds nothing to verify. Claiming your listing and publishing your COAs is the fix, and it's free to start.
Free to run, free to claim. The total-THC rule is already in force and the federal definition is expected to change November 12, 2026.
Informational compliance snapshot built from your public web presence and the Texas hemp directory — not legal advice. Product and COA counts are the real numbers we found published under your business; verify results with your lab and counsel before acting. Questions? [email protected]