RSO and Oral Syringe Basics

RSO and oral syringe products are concentrated cannabis oils usually compared by total mg, serving guidance, route instructions, and package size. They should not be treated like vape carts or dabbable concentrates unless the label clearly says that route is intended.

This comparison is for understanding product formats and labels, not medical advice. A qualified physician and the product label are the better sources for personal medical questions. Florida Dispensary Guide does not sell cannabis, and concentrate availability varies by MMTC, location, route, and patient eligibility.

Use these pages to understand product-label terms before comparing Florida dispensary menus or deals. Verify route, ingredients, COA, hardware, availability, and terms directly with the dispensary.

What the syringe format means

A syringe or applicator can make a thick cannabis oil easier to dispense in small amounts. The package may list total THC mg, CBD mg, servings, route instructions, and ingredients.

The format does not automatically mean the product is safe to inhale, cook with, or use in every route. The label is the starting point.

RSO vs other oils

RSO is often a dark, concentrated cannabis oil. Other oral syringes may be distillate, ratio oil, CBD-rich oil, or another formulation.

Patients should compare the product name, cannabinoid amounts, route, total package mg, and physician guidance rather than assuming all syringes are interchangeable.

Value checks

Price per mg THC may be useful when total package mg is clear. It is less useful when the product contains multiple cannabinoids and the patient is comparing different ratios.

Serving size matters. A high total mg product may not be a better fit if the label, route, or physician recommendation points to a different product type.