In January the ACMD said khat should remain a legal substance, saying there was "insufficient evidence" it caused health problems.
Khat will be treated as a class C drug, like cannabis and ketamine.
The Home Office said the ban was intended to "protect vulnerable members of our communities" and would be brought in at the "earliest possible opportunity".
Khat is already banned in most of Europe and in a number of other countries, including the US and Canada.
The UK's decision to follow suit is based on security and international considerations, in particular concerns the UK could be used as a transit route for khat to other European countries.
"Failure to take decisive action and change the UK's legislative position on khat would place the UK at a serious risk of becoming a single, regional hub for the illegal onward trafficking," Mrs May said in a statement.
But campaigners said they were "disappointed and concerned" at the government's decision to reject the advisory council's advice.
"A more proportionate alternative to banning khat and criminalising its use would have been an import ban or making it a supply offence only as applies, for example, to controlled anabolic steroids," said Martin Barnes from charity Drugscope.
'Significant social problem'
Khat is traditionally used by members of the Somali, Yemeni and Ethiopian communities
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