Applied, not ingested: why cannabis topicals work differently

Standard cannabis topicals don't penetrate deeply enough to enter systemic circulation in any meaningful way — cannabinoids interact with CB1 and CB2 receptors in the skin directly, producing localized effects without reaching the brain.

Athlete applying cannabis topical Photo by: Gina Coleman/Weedmaps

Cannabis topicals bypass the lungs and gut entirely — interacting with your skin instead of your bloodstream.

That's not a minor distinction. Inhaled and ingested cannabis both enter systemic circulation, moving through your body and reaching your brain. Topicals don't. They stay where you put them, which is exactly the point. That's what makes them the go-to for athletes, people managing localized discomfort, and anyone who wants the benefits of cannabinoids without the high — and it's also what makes them a fundamentally different product category, not just a different format.

The three ways cannabinoids enter the body

Every cannabis experience is shaped by the same question: how do cannabinoids actually get into your system?

Inhalation sends cannabinoids through the lungs. They cross into the bloodstream through the alveoli in seconds, circulate immediately, and reach the brain fast — which is why the onset is so quick and the effects feel pronounced.

Ingestion takes the long route. Cannabinoids move through the digestive tract, enter the bloodstream, and pass through the liver. That liver step matters: it converts THC into 11-hydroxy-THC, a metabolite that crosses the blood-brain barrier more efficiently and tends to produce stronger, longer-lasting effects. That's why edibles hit differently than flower — same cannabinoid, different compound by the time it reaches the brain.

Topical application skips both systems. No lungs. No liver. No circulation.

Why topicals stay put

How cannabinoids enter the body

Your skin isn't passive — it's designed to keep things out. The outermost layer, the stratum corneum, is dense and tightly packed, and standard cannabis topicals — creams, balms, CBD topicals, THC topicals — generally don't penetrate deeply enough to enter systemic circulation in any meaningful way. Cannabinoids can diffuse into the epidermal and dermal layers depending on formulation and skin condition, but without transdermal enhancement systems, they're poor candidates for efficient absorption into the bloodstream.

That's the functional distinction: not that cannabinoids hit an absolute wall, but that they don't travel far enough or efficiently enough to produce psychoactive effects. No systemic distribution means no high.

One important line to understand: standard topicals and transdermal patches are not the same product. Transdermals are specifically engineered to cross the skin barrier and enter circulation. If localized relief with no intoxication is the goal, you want a topical — not a transdermal.

Where cannabinoids actually interact

Female puts cannabis topical on wrist Photo by: Gina Coleman/Weedmaps

Staying in the skin doesn't mean doing nothing. The skin contains its own endocannabinoid receptor network — CB1 and CB2 receptors associated with nerve, immune, and skin-cell signaling — and cannabinoids from a cannabis cream or balm can interact directly with those receptors at the site of application.

No circulation required. The effect is local because the cannabinoids are local.

The practical difference

cannabis topicals CTA

Topicals aren't a compromise or a workaround — they're a different tool for a different job. When localized application is the goal, a cream or balm that stays where you put it outperforms anything that has to travel through your bloodstream to get there.

Browse cannabis topicals for pickup or delivery near you on Weedmaps.

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The information contained in this site is provided for informational purposes only, and should not be construed as medical or legal advice. This page was last updated on May 7, 2026.