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Thailand to Allow Home Growing of Cannabis

Author
Author Aleph One
26 January 2022
The complete legalization of the cannabis plant will facilitate its home cultivation and boost the country’s agriculture
26 January 2022
2 min read
Thailand to Allow Home Growing of Cannabis

On Tuesday, Thailand’s narcotics board announced its decision to remove the cannabis plant and all its parts from the list of illicit drugs. The move will make the country the first in South-East Asia to allow its residents to legally grow the crop. In 2018, Thailand was the first in the region to recognize the therapeutic benefits of the plant by legalizing its medical use.

To grow cannabis legally, a homeowner will have to notify local authorities and be ready for random inspections. And one would need a special license to be able to sell the produce because, in its current reading, the law only stipulates the personal consumption of cannabis as traditional medicine.

The Culmination of Legalizing Weed Incrementally

Thailand’s health ministry is expected to present a separate bill this week that will provide guidelines for the consumption of cannabis-derived products, including their recreational use. The draft will also tackle the issues of sale and distribution.

Meanwhile, the current bill will be published in the Royal Gazette which will mark the beginning of the 120-day waiting period. After that, the domestic cultivation of cannabis will be legal in Thailand.


Thailand to Allow Home Growing of Cannabis: Two potted weed plants on a back porch of a country house

A garden like this will be perfectly legal in Thailand in 4 months.


The country has been long warming up to the idea of cannabis legalization. Since last December, it has been legal to grow, possess, and sell parts of the plant that are low in cannabinoids. These are roots, stems, branches, and leaves. On the heels of that decision came the next one — to allow flowers as well.

From Pizza Toppings to Research Centers

As with any other cash crop, cannabis can potentially mean a lot for the country where a third of the labor force works in the agricultural sector. As it is, there’s been a boom in the cosmetics and food industry since the legalization of medical cannabis made it possible to add CBD and the plant’s other constituents to various products.

One of the country’s biggest fast-food chains has recently introduced a weed-flavored pizza that is decorated—as an added bonus—with fresh cannabis leaves. This novelty isn’t likely to stay on the menu for long and will probably vanish even before the stock of the leaves runs out, but it shows Thailand’s growing interest in the plant.

Another sign that the country takes all this weed business seriously is the opening of a research center for medical cannabis. Far from being a local thing, the center has attracted the attention of researchers from Canada, the Netherlands, and Japan. It’s a testimony that international stakeholders consider Thailand as South-East Asia’s most important hub of the future cannabis market.