Canada

How to get weed in every province in Canada

Published on December 10, 2021 · Last updated April 18, 2022
Canada map and hand holding buds
Keep your stash from running low by being in the know on how to buy weed anywhere in Canada. (Jesse Milns/Leafly)

How you buy cannabis in Canada depends on where you live, since regulations vary by province. This means how you access legal products is different across the country. And the ways you can legally buy cannabis are continuing to evolve. 

Prior to adult-use legalization, there was only one way to buy legal weed in Canada: from a medical provider and delivered through the mail. While medical cannabis patients must still purchase their products through the mail-order system, recreational products can be bought in a variety of ways.

Three years into legalized cannabis, most provinces and territories have physical storefronts, either government-run or through private retailers, as well as some sort of online ordering system.

And a few provinces now allow, or have plans to allow, consumers, to purchase directly from a producer or grower, usually called “farmgate” sales.

Ontario

Where to buy weed in Ontario

  • Ontario Cannabis Store (provincial, online only)
  • In a cannabis retail store (private)
  • Curbside pick-up and delivery (private) 

Ontario, Canada’s largest cannabis market with 15 million people, has one of the more diverse retail systems. There are more than 1,000 approved private retail stores in Ontario, with new stores continuing to be approved. 

If you want to buy cannabis in Ontario, you can shop online at the government-run Ontario Cannabis Store, in-store at a privately owned retailer, or order directly from a private retailer.

Ontario didn’t originally allow private stores to sell online, but that changed when the pandemic hit. An emergency measure in April 2020 temporarily allowed cannabis stores to do curbside pickup and delivery. Beginning March 15, 2022, Ontario made both curbside pick-up and delivery options permanent

Toronto City skyline at sunset, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
There are approximately 250 cannabis retail stores in Toronto. (Adobe Stock)

Delivery is limited to store staff directly delivering the cannabis to consumers, rather than using a third-party delivery service (like Uber or Pineapple Express). Cannabis is only allowed to be delivered during normal store hours. 

If delivery isn’t your thing, a few cities even offer drive-thru options at their retail stores.

Ontario also became the first province to allow cannabis farmgate sales, with the first store opening on April 20, 2021. Farmgate stores allow consumers to purchase cannabis where it is grown, offering a different experience than a retail store.

Shop highly rated dispensaries near you

Showing you dispensaries near
See all dispensaries

There are currently three cannabis producers with such farmgate licenses in Ontario—Station House Cannabis in St. Thomas,  Royal Cannabis Supply Company in Etobicoke, and Thrive Cannabis in Simcoe.

British Columbia

Where to buy weed in British Columbia

  • BC Cannabis Store (provincial, online only)
  • In a cannabis retail store (private)
  • Delivery (private) 

In British Columbia, you can purchase cannabis through privately operated retail stores, publicly owned BC Cannabis Stores, as well as online from the BC Cannabis Store. The majority of retailers are privately owned, with only about 30 of the more than 400 stores in the province being a BC Cannabis Store. 

In July 2021, BC announced they were allowing private retailers to engage in-home delivery of cannabis products. One retail christened their first delivery in a motorcycle and sidecar.

The allowance was built upon a rule change from August 2020 that allowed private cannabis stores to do online sales and curbside pickups due to concerns related to COVID-19. 

How cannabis is sold is largely up to the provinces, and each region will continue to build systems that fit their own unique identities.

How cannabis is sold is largely up to the provinces, and each region will continue to build systems that fit their own unique identities.

Like Ontario, home delivery can only be done by the retailer and not through third-party delivery services or the mail. BC also recently announced that retailers can sell cannabis accessories like books and clothing

Although private retailers are required to deliver their own cannabis, as of March 1, residents in the Metro Vancouver area can have their cannabis they ordered via the provincial online store delivered the next day via Pineapple Express Delivery. 

British Columbia has also announced their plans for farmgate sales sometime in 2022. Although details on the plan are still limited, the province has said they want to focus on helping small cannabis farms

Alberta

Where to buy weed in Alberta

Alberta

Where to buy weed in Alberta

  • In a cannabis retail store (private)
  • Delivery (private)

Alberta has a system with over 700 private retail stores (and growing). 

Like most other provinces and territories,  the Alberta government initially managed all online sales. That changed on March 8, 2022, when the province shut down their own online store and began allowing private retailers to pick up the torch. 

Albertans can now order cannabis from an array of private retail locations, with stores offering delivery and in some cases even mail order. Like Ontario and British Columbia, retailers must deliver their own products, rather than using a third-party delivery service. 

top view of green cannabis leaf and legalize lettering on wooden cubes near flag of Canada on white background
Canada was the first G7 country to federally legalize cannabis. (Adobe Stock)

Manitoba and Saskatchewan

Where to buy weed in Manitoba and Saskatchewan

  • In a cannabis retail store (private)
  • Delivery

Manitoba and Saskatchewan only have private retail cannabis stores, with over 100 locations in each province. They are the only provinces that have never managed online sales themselves, opting to have individual stores choose to manage that option.

Cannabis retailers are permitted to deliver products via their own staff, or even through third-party delivery services. This means that in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, you can order weed like pizza, without ever having to leave the house (or waiting on the postal service).

Newfoundland

Where to buy weed in Newfoundland

  • In a cannabis retail store (private)
  • Some delivery options

Newfoundlanders can buy cannabis from several dozen private cannabis stores, or through Cannabis NL

Public Stores: Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and PEI

Where to buy weed in Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and PEI

The province began allowing retailers to offer delivery as an option for consumers in 2021and also allows retailers to operate a drive-thru window. 

Although the province has said they are open to farmgate sales, no producers have opted in yet. One retailer, Atlantic Cannabis, has recently begun selling clones in a few of its stores, a first in Canada’s legal market. 

Public Stores: Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and PEI

Where to buy weed in Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and PEI

  • Cannabis retail stores (provincial)
  • No private stores, no delivery (mail only)

Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and PEI each have only government-run retail stores and the only option for delivery is mail-ordered from the online provincial store in each province: the SQDC in Quebec, Cannabis NB in New Brunswick, NSLC in Nova Scotia, and PEI Cannabis

New Brunswick’s government recently passed legislation that will allow for privately owned cannabis stores to operate in the province in addition to the 20 public Cannabis NB stores. These private stores will still operate under the banner of Cannabis NB. 

A public RFP process to select potential private store owners is said to begin later this year. No date for when the first stores will open has been set.

New Brunswick also announced their own cannabis farmgate program earlier this year, with three now currently operating in the province. Consumers can buy locally made cannabis products, as well as seeds and plants at participating locations. 

Yukon, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut

Cannabis in the territories has several different approaches. 

In the Yukon, consumers can purchase from a handful of private stores. Until recently, online sales were managed exclusively by the territory, but new legislation that was recently passed is opening up that option to private retail stores. Those sales are said to begin as early as May of this year

Those in the Northwest Territories can buy their cannabis from one of six privately owned stores. Online sales are managed through Releaf NT; however, in-person deliveries are still not allowed in the territory. The owner of Releaf NT says there have been discussions about allowing this in the future in the Yellowknife area where they are located. 

In 2020, the cannabis industry grew to $2.6 billion and is expected to be worth over $8 billion by 2026. (Adobe Stock)

Package delivery with a brown bag of marijuana and a payment terminal.
In 2020, the cannabis industry grew to $2.6 billion and is expected to be worth over $8 billion by 2026. (Adobe Stock)

Nunavut is the only jurisdiction in Canada that allows residents to order directly from cannabis producers. They must be approved by the territorial government, and currently, there are only two approved producers

Nunavut also currently has one private retail store, which also offers online shopping and mail delivery.

In-person purchases dominate retail sales

Overall, brick-and-mortar stores dominate cannabis sales, with the vast majority of purchases in every province coming from in-person visits.

Based on provincial reports, online sales tend to be a small portion of overall sales, sometimes only a few percentage points. Farmgate sales are still quite new, making it too early to gauge annual sales figures. 

Canada’s retail system will continue to evolve. Although store numbers in several provinces continue to grow, there are expectations of closures and consolidations as well.

How cannabis is sold is largely up to the provinces, and each region will continue to build systems that fit their own unique identities.

Shop highly rated dispensaries near you

Showing you dispensaries near
See all dispensaries
David Brown
David Brown
David Brown has been working in and writing about the cannabis industry in Canada since 2012. He was formerly the Editor in Chief and Communications Director for Lift Cannabis and Lift News, a Senior Policy Advisor for Health Canada's cannabis legalization branch, and is the founder of StratCann Services Inc.
View David Brown's articles
Get good reads, local deals, and strain spotlights delivered right to your inbox.

By providing us with your email address, you agree to Leafly's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.