Blessed CBD is the brand UK reviewers reach for when asked to name a premium benchmark. Founded in 2018 by a family-run team in Edinburgh, it has built its reputation on a narrow product range, transparent sourcing, and a consistent habit of publishing third-party lab work. The 1000mg Full Spectrum bottle is its flagship — and the product we bought to put this review together.

What follows is our honest take after four weeks of daily use: what it's like to buy, to taste, to dose, and to live with. We compare it against three direct UK competitors on price per milligram. We tell you who should buy it and who should look elsewhere.

At a glance.

The essentials
Strength1000mg (10%)
Volume10ml
SpectrumFull-spectrum
Carrier oilHemp seed
Hemp originUSA & Europe, organic
FlavourUnflavoured, earthy
THCUnder 1mg (UK legal)
Novel FoodsOn FSA register
Refund30 days VERIFY
VeganYes
Lab Verified
The current batch COA VERIFY DATE confirms CBD content of ~987mg against the 1000mg label claim — within roughly 1.3% of the stated strength, well inside normal laboratory variance. THC tested under 1mg per bottle, within UK legal limits. Full report on Blessed CBD's website.

What it's like to take.

The oil itself is a dark amber-green — the colour comes from whole-plant extraction and hemp-seed carrier, the traditional European full-spectrum formulation. It's thicker than the MCT-based oils you may be used to if you've tried brands like Naturecan or Goodrays. You notice this from the first drop: the oil pools under the tongue rather than dispersing quickly.

The taste is the first thing to know about. Blessed's 1000mg is unflavoured — the brand argues that at this potency, flavouring would compromise the full-spectrum profile. The result is a pronounced earthy, grassy, slightly bitter flavour that first-time CBD users often find difficult. Imagine fresh hemp leaves mixed with a teaspoon of olive oil. It isn't pleasant in a conventional sense. Experienced full-spectrum users tend to recognise and accept it; new buyers should brace themselves.

The dropper graduations are embossed rather than printed. Reading "0.25ml" in low evening light is harder than it should be at this price point.

Daily use is straightforward. Two or three drops under the tongue, held for a minute before swallowing. Most users follow with water or a small bite of something sweet — both standard workarounds in the CBD community. Over four weeks of consistent evening dosing, the routine becomes unremarkable; the taste never quite fades but you stop noticing it.

Blessed CBD 1000mg bottle being held outdoors
Bottle, dropper, and label detail. Show the colour of the oil, the clarity of the labelling, the quality of the packaging.

How it compares on price.

Blessed CBD's 1000mg is not the cheapest 10% oil on the UK market, nor is it the most expensive. It sits firmly in the premium tier — above the mid-range by £15-25, below the niche European imports by £20-30.

The per-milligram calculation across four UK oils at similar strength:

  • Blessed CBD 1000mg — £60–£80 → £0.075 per mg
  • Naturecan 1000mg Broad-Spectrum — £50–£70 → £0.060 per mg
  • Love Hemp 800mg Full Spectrum — £35–£55 → £0.056 per mg
  • Goodrays 1000mg Broad-Spectrum — £35–£55 → £0.055 per mg

Blessed is the most expensive per milligram by roughly 25-35%. Whether that premium is justified depends entirely on what you value. Documented cannabinoid complexity and batch-level lab consistency: yes. Optimising for cost per milligram: no — better value exists elsewhere on our buying guide.

Pros and cons.

What works

  • Batch-specific COAs published consistently and openly
  • Narrow product range suggests tight quality control
  • Genuine full-spectrum profile, not CBD-with-trace-terpene
  • Family-run UK operation with a long trading history
  • 30-day refund policy for first-time buyers

What doesn't

  • Premium pricing — more affordable paths into full-spectrum exist
  • Bitter, earthy taste is challenging for first-time buyers
  • Dropper graduations embossed rather than printed, hard to read
  • Not suitable for drug-tested workplaces due to trace THC

Who it's for.

Blessed CBD 1000mg is the right buy for a specific reader: someone who has already decided full-spectrum is the profile they want, who values documented transparency above sticker price, and who will use the oil consistently enough for the 10% strength to make sense. If all three apply, this is the oil to buy.

It is not the right buy for a first-time, cautious buyer on a tight budget — start with something more approachable. It is not the right buy for anyone subject to workplace drug testing — Naturecan's broad-spectrum is the better answer. And it is not the right buy for a buyer who will be defeated by the taste and quietly abandon the bottle after two weeks.

The bottom line.

Blessed CBD's 1000mg Full Spectrum is the best-documented full-spectrum oil on the UK market in April 2026. The premium price is real, and so is what you get for it: a genuine cannabinoid profile, consistent lab reporting, a UK brand with a long trading record. There are cheaper oils worth buying. There are few better ones.

Score: 9.2 / 10. Our top pick for Best CBD Oil UK 2026.

Frequently asked questions.

Is Blessed CBD a UK company?

Yes. Blessed CBD is a family-run business based in Edinburgh, founded in 2018 and operating exclusively in the UK market.

Is Blessed CBD on the FSA Novel Foods list?

Yes. Blessed CBD's products appear on the FSA's public register of CBD products linked to Novel Food applications. Our legal guide explains the framework in detail.

Will Blessed CBD show up on a drug test?

Possibly. Full-spectrum contains trace THC within the UK legal limit that can in rare cases trigger positive drug tests. Choose broad-spectrum or isolate if you're drug-tested.

How does Blessed CBD compare to Naturecan?

Blessed is full-spectrum with hemp-seed carrier. Naturecan is broad-spectrum with MCT carrier and non-detectable THC. Blessed for cannabinoid complexity; Naturecan for drug-tested workplaces.

Does Blessed CBD offer discount codes?

Periodic promotions rather than a permanent discount. Subscribers to The Weekly Dispatch hear when material discounts go live — usually two to three times per year.