When you buy full-spectrum CBD oil online in Sydney, the label tells you everything. The ingredient list, the spectrum declaration, the THC figure, and the batch Certificate of Analysis are the only things that matter — because full-spectrum CBD oil is defined entirely by what it contains, not by any claim about what it does. Here is how to read that label, what each line means, and what CBD Oil Sydney puts in ours.

This page covers the cannabinoid make-up of a full-spectrum hemp extract, how it compares to the other spectrums CBD Oil Sydney stocks, the four strengths in the range, and the legal framework that applies in NSW. Nothing here is medical advice, and we name every product by what it contains.
What the label means: the full-spectrum composition
Full-spectrum CBD oil starts with the hemp plant. The extraction pulls cannabidiol (CBD) — the primary compound — along with the smaller cannabinoids and the terpenes that occur naturally in the same plant. "Full spectrum" names the preservation of that whole-plant profile: the array of cannabinoids kept together as they are in hemp, not reduced to a single molecule.
The cannabinoids present in this whole-plant extract include the dominant CBD, plus minor compounds such as cannabigerol (CBG) and cannabinol (CBN) in smaller fractions, alongside the plant's natural terpenes. The term "full spectrum" on a label is a composition description — it means none of those naturally co-occurring compounds have been selectively removed.
The part that requires the closest label attention is the THC figure. Because full-spectrum CBD oil is a whole-plant extract, a legal trace of THC is present. In the products CBD Oil Sydney sells, that trace is always kept below 0.3% — the threshold that defines hemp under Australian law — and the exact percentage for each production batch is confirmed on the batch Certificate of Analysis. Hemp is Cannabis sativa L. cultivated as a low-THC variety; the oil is hemp-derived CBD, not a high-THC product.
Full-spectrum CBD oil vs broad-spectrum vs isolate — what actually changes
Three spectrum terms appear across CBD oil labels and they describe three different manufacturing choices. The difference is straightforward once you know what each step removes.
The full-spectrum option is the baseline: the whole-plant hemp extract, THC trace retained below 0.3%. Nothing from the natural cannabinoid profile has been taken out.
Broad-spectrum is full-spectrum with one extra processing step: the THC is removed, bringing it to 0% THC, while the other hemp compounds — the minor cannabinoids and terpenes — stay in. We keep a dedicated guide on the CBD Oil Sydney broad-spectrum CBD oil page, and the entry-level broad-spectrum 1000mg bottle shows the side-by-side composition on its product page.
Isolate reduces the extract further to a single cannabinoid. Our CBN oil is an example of this approach — cannabinol supplied as a THC-free isolate, with everything else stripped away (CBN oil 1000mg). There is also CBG oil — cannabigerol, the compound the hemp plant biosynthesises first before converting it to other cannabinoids (CBG oil 1000mg). CBG oil is a single-cannabinoid product, not part of the CBD line, but it sits alongside the others on the range page.
The choice between these three is a preference about composition, not a quality ranking. The whole-plant hemp extract keeps the broadest cannabinoid range, including the THC trace; broad-spectrum keeps that range but eliminates the THC; isolate reduces to one compound. Strength — the mg figure — is a separate decision covered in the next section.
Reading the mg figures: strength, volume, and concentration
Strength is the milligram number on the label, and it refers to the total cannabinoid content in the whole bottle. Every bottle in the CBD Oil Sydney full-spectrum range is 50ml, so the per-millilitre concentration is simply the strength divided by 50.
The four strengths in the range are:
- Full-spectrum CBD oil 1000mg — $89.95, 20mg per ml
- 3000mg full-spectrum oil — 60mg per ml
- 6000mg full-spectrum oil — 120mg per ml
- 12000mg full-spectrum oil — 240mg per ml
Each bottle contains approximately 100 × 0.5ml servings regardless of strength. The higher the mg, the more cannabinoid is packed into each millilitre. Carrier oil across all four strengths is neutral MCT — medium-chain triglycerides, coconut-derived — which keeps the taste mild and the consistency consistent. The oils are imported from EU Labs and dispatched within Australia; the full range with current AUD prices sits on the CBD Oil Sydney products page.

What else the label should show: batch number and COA
A well-labelled hemp extract carries more than the spectrum declaration and mg figure. When your order arrives in Sydney, look for these three items on the label:
Batch or lot number — the production identifier that ties this bottle to its third-party lab results. Without a batch number, a COA cannot be matched to the product in your hands.
Third-party Certificate of Analysis — the independent lab report confirming the actual cannabinoid concentrations and that the THC sits at the declared percentage. CBD Oil Sydney sends the matching batch COA on request to [email protected] — it is not posted on the website, but it is available for every batch we stock.
Carrier oil declaration — what the hemp extract is dissolved in. Ours is MCT (coconut-derived); some brands use olive or hemp seed oil, which is also fine, but worth knowing.
From our CBD oil range

3000mg CBN Oil — Cannabinol
Cannabinol at mid-strength. The cannabinoid that develops as raw hemp ages, supplied here as a THC-free isolate in a neutral MCT carrier. 3000mg in 50ml, a steady 60mg per ml.

6000mg CBD Oil — Broad Spectrum
Higher-strength broad-spectrum hemp with the THC removed. The cannabinoids and terpenes are otherwise intact across the profile. 6000mg of CBD in a 50ml MCT bottle, 120mg per ml.

12000mg CBG Oil — Cannabigerol
Our strongest cannabigerol oil. CBG is the precursor hemp forms first and the least abundant cannabinoid in the plant. Full-spectrum, trace THC. 12000mg in 50ml MCT, 240mg per ml.
Is full-spectrum CBD oil legal in NSW?
Full-spectrum CBD oil sits within a national regulatory framework that applies equally in NSW and across Australia. The key event was the 2021 decision by the Therapeutic Goods Administration to down-schedule low-dose cannabidiol — up to 150mg per day — from prescription-only to pharmacist-only. In practice, no product has yet been approved for that pharmacist-only over-the-counter pathway, which means the route most people follow is hemp-derived CBD oil described by its composition.
Higher-strength or different-formulation products remain prescription-only, available through authorised prescribers. The TGA publishes the full scheduling detail at its website, which is the definitive source for regulatory status in NSW and elsewhere. CBD Oil Sydney sells its oils as products, describes them by composition, and makes no health claims. Our oils are for adults 18 and over, and they are not suitable for anyone pregnant or breastfeeding.
Buying full-spectrum CBD oil online in Sydney
CBD Oil Sydney is an online store for Sydney and NSW — no physical counter, just a straightforward range on the website and standard post to your address. We ship to Sydney CBD, Parramatta, Bondi, Chatswood and Australia-wide. Every price is in plain AUD, starting from $89.95 for the entry-level 1000mg bottle, and every batch has a Certificate of Analysis available on request.
If you are comparing full-spectrum with broad-spectrum or considering a single-cannabinoid oil, the full product range shows all families and strengths in one view. You can read the CBD Oil Sydney broad-spectrum guide if the 0% THC formulation is a priority, or visit the individual product pages to see the composition side by side.
Common questions about full-spectrum CBD oil in Sydney
What makes an oil "full-spectrum"? Full-spectrum CBD oil is a whole-plant hemp extract that keeps CBD together with the plant's minor cannabinoids and terpenes, including a legal trace of THC below 0.3%. The term describes the composition.
How do I check the THC content? It is declared on the product label and confirmed on the batch Certificate of Analysis. Contact [email protected] with your batch number and we will send the COA for that specific production run.
What is the difference between full-spectrum and broad-spectrum? Broad-spectrum removes the THC through an additional processing step, leaving 0% THC while keeping the other hemp cannabinoids. Full-spectrum retains the trace. Both types are available on the CBD Oil Sydney products page.
Is full-spectrum CBD oil legal in NSW? Australia's regulatory framework applies equally in NSW: the TGA down-scheduled low-dose CBD to pharmacist-only in 2021, and the full scheduling detail is at the TGA website. Full-spectrum CBD oil is sold as a product and described by composition only.
Can I get a Certificate of Analysis for my bottle? Yes — email [email protected] with the batch number printed on your bottle and we will send the matching lab report.


