Cannabis in the United Kingdom

Map of cannabis laws in Europe
Legality of cannabis in Europe
  Legal for recreational use
  Legal for medical use
  Illegal
Industrial hemp farm outside Southminster

Cannabis in the United Kingdom is illegal for recreational use and is classified as a Class B drug. In 2004, the United Kingdom made cannabis a Class C drug with less severe penalties, but it was moved back to Class B in 2009. Medical use of cannabis, when prescribed by a registered specialist doctor, was legalised in November 2018.

Cannabis is widely used as an illegal drug in the UK, while other strains lower in THC have been used industrially for over a thousand years for fibre, oil and seeds. Cannabis has been restricted as a drug in the United Kingdom since 1928, though its usage as a recreational drug was limited until the 1960s, when increasing popularity led to its stricter 1971 classification.

Despite the fact that cannabis is still illegal in the UK, with limited availability for medical use, as of 2016 the United Kingdom was the world's largest exporter of legal cannabis.[1]

  1. ^ "Narcotic Drugs - Estimated World Requirements for 2018 - Statistics for 2016" (PDF). International Narcotics Control Board. United Nations. Archived (PDF) from the original on 6 December 2018. Retrieved 5 December 2018.