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Where cannabis is legal in Europe

Where cannabis is legal in Europe

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rsz_path_5921 Medical cannabis
Illegal (including decriminalized)

Where is weed legal in Europe? The majority of European countries have legalized medical marijuana in recent years, although access remains inconsistent across the continent. A growing number of countries have decriminalized possession of small amounts of cannabis, transforming mariljuana laws in Europe so that criminal penalties are largely a thing of the past. However, the marijuana laws in Europe can be confusing, with some countries having legalized only derivatives of the cannabis plant and not flowers or other natural forms of the plant. With the European Union recently legalizing CBD and hemp products, however, it is important to check the rules before you travel if you are concerned about where marijuana is legal in Europe.

Medical background Layer 1
Medical
Decriminalzation
Decriminalization
Albania
  • Medical: Illegal
  • Recreational: Illegal

Albania does not have a medical marijuana program and even small amounts of marijuana for personal use can be penalized by significant jail time. Albania is one of the largest illicit producers of marijuana in Europe, but this has not had an effect on the country’s laws regarding cannabis.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Albania.

Andorra
  • Medical: Illegal
  • Recreational: Illegal

Cannabis is not legal for recreational or medicinal purposes in Andorra. That said, it does border the Catalonia region of Spain, which has the most liberal cannabis laws in the country, as well as a network of members-only cannabis clubs.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Andorra.

Austria
  • Medical: Illegal (cannabis-derived pharmaceuticals only)
  • Recreational: Decriminalized

Austria’s marijuana laws are complicated but more tolerant than a number of countries on the continent. Reforms went into effect in 2016 that decriminalized possession of small quantities of cannabis for personal use. In 2008, cannabis byproducts for medicinal use (CBPMs) were legalized through an amendment to the Narcotic Substances Act. That said, access to medical cannabis is still quite restricted in the country, and while marijuana-derived medications like Dronabinol and Sativex are legal, they are not often prescribed. In addition, in 2019 the country banned the sale of CBD for cosmetics and food products.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Austria.

Belarus
  • Medical: illegal
  • Recreational: illegal

Belarus has some of the harshest drug laws in the continent and the country makes no distinction whatsoever between cannabis and hemp, nor is any medical usage allowed.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Belarus.

Belgium
  • Medical: legal (only Sativex available)
  • Recreational: illegal, decriminalized 

While recreational cannabis is not legal in Belgium, possession of up to three grams by an adult over 18 is decriminalized and punishable by only a fine. There are a number of cannabis social clubs in Belgium that operate in a similar way to Spain’s cannabis clubs.

The country has a limited medical cannabis program that only recognizes Sativex. You can find CBD products for sale throughout the country.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Belgium.

Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Medical: illegal
  • Recreational: illegal

Cannabis is illegal for medical or recreational use in Bosnia and Herzegovina. In recent years lawmakers and patients have called for the legalization of medical marijuana, but so far no progress has been reached. 

Learn more about cannabis laws in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Bulgaria
  • Medical: illegal
  • Recreational: illegal

Neither medical nor recreational cannabis is legal in Bulgaria. Under the Narcotic Substances and Precursors Control Act, cultivation, possession, and sale of marijuana are illegal, but farmers can grow industrial hemp with a permit from the government. 

In May 2019, Bulgaria became the first EU country to allow the legal sale of CBD products.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Bulgaria.

Croatia
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: decriminalized

Croatia has a relatively progressive approach to cannabis laws, and since 2013, the possession of cannabis for personal use is considered a misdemeanor under the country’s Drug Abuse Prevention Act (DAPA), and punishable by a fine of between 650-2,600 Euros. In 2015, the country legalized the use of cannabis for medical purposes, and has imported medical marijuana in the absence of a domestic industry.  In 2019, the country approved the cultivation of hemp for medical purposes. Also, in early 2020, a Croatian lawmaker presented a bill to legalize recreational marijuana use in the country.

Cyprus
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: illegal

Recreational marijuana is not legal in Cyprus, but there is a medical cannabis program. In 2019, Cypriot lawmakers approved a law legalizing the possession, import and export, and cultivation of marijuana for medical use

Learn more about cannabis laws in Cyprus.

Czech Republic
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: decriminalized 

In general the legal system in the Czech Republic has a relatively tolerant attitude towards drug use. In 2009, the country updated its penal code to decriminalize cultivation of up to five plants and possession of up to 10 grams of cannabis and 5 grams of cannabis resin, which is subject to a simple fine. The country also approved a medical marijuana program in 2013.

Denmark
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: largely decriminalized 

While cannabis remains illegal in Denmark, possession for personal use typically results in a fine at most. For possession to be considered trafficking, the offender must have around 10kg of cannabis. Denmark legalized medical marijuana in 2018, though access has been limited and the only products available are Sativex and Marinol.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Denmark.

Estonia
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: illegal (largely decriminalized) 

The use of marijuana for medical purposes was approved in Estonia in 2005, but the country’s medical marijuana program has yet to get off the ground. Cannabis remains illegal in the country for recreational purposes, but possession is typically punished by a simple fine.

Finland
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: illegal 

Medical cannabis was legalized in Finland in 2008 but it remains on a patient-by-patient basis and access is still considered quite sparse. Recreational cannabis is still illegal in the country, though possession is often subject to only a fine. There is also a growing movement towards decriminalization, though it has not resulted in changes to the penal code as of yet.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Finland.

France
  • Medical: cannabis-derived medicines only
  • Recreational: illegal (partly decriminalized)

France first approved a medical marijuana law in 2013, although only cannabis-derived medicines became legal and are very difficult to obtain. In January 2021, the country was set to begin a two-year trial program providing free cannabis treatment to 3,000 patients. France has long had one of the harshest approaches to recreational marijuana use in western Europe, but in 2018, the country passed new regulations that reduce the penalty for possession to a fine of approximately 200 Euros.

Learn more about cannabis laws in France.

Germany
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: largely decriminalized

Germany first began legally allowing medical marijuana in 1998, when Dronabinol first became available for prescription. The program has expanded significantly since then, and in 2017, the prescription of medical marijuana became legal in the country. Today it is considered the largest medical marijuana market in Europe. 

Recreational cannabis possession, cultivation, and sale remains illegal in Germany, but cases involving possession of small amounts (anything between around 6 to 15 grams depending on the region) are typically not prosecuted.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Germany.

Greece
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: illegal

In 2017, the government of Greece announced a plan to legalize medical cannabis and in 2018, approved permits for the cultivation and processing of hemp. In August, 2019, the country approved more than two dozen medical cannabis cultivation and processing licenses, but the country’s medical marijuana program has yet to go into operation. 

Recreational marijuana is illegal in the country and possession can result in a prison sentence of up to five months, but the offence is not recorded on the offender’s record if they don’t commit another offense within five years. Possession of small amounts of cannabis can also be punished by a simple fine or rehabilitation program.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Greece.

Hungary

Medical: technically legal, no access
Recreational: illegal 

Recreational cannabis is not legal in Hungary. Medical cannabis is technically legal, but there is no legal structure for growing, processing, buying, selling, or getting a prescription for it. 

Hungary’s laws don’t differentiate between cannabis and harder drugs. More than half of the country’s drug law offenses in 2017 were related to cannabis, and according to Hungarian law, both drug use and possession are punishable by up to two years in prison.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Hungary.

Iceland
  • Medical: ilegal
  • Recreational: illegal 

Recreational marijuana is illegal in Iceland though a bill introduced to parliament in 2019 (by a member of parliament from the Pirate Party) would decriminalize buying, receiving, or possessing drugs if they are for personal use. Iceland allows the import of CBD for personal use, and Sativex can be received on prescription in the country. 

Learn more about cannabis laws in Iceland.

Ireland
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: illegal

Recreational cannabis is illegal in Ireland, though possession for the first or second offense is rarely punished with more than a fine. In 2019 the country launched a medical cannabis program and approved two medical CBD products for sale to qualifying patients. In 2016, the parents of a child in Ireland were granted approval by the minister for health to use cannabis oil to treat his epilepsy.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Ireland.

Italy
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: decriminalized 

Possession of cannabis for personal use in Italy is largely decriminalized, and subject to administrative sanctions such as the suspension of a driver’s license or a fine. In 2019, Italy’s highest court ruled that growing small amounts of marijuana at home for personal use is not a crime. 

A law passed in 2016 allows the sale of hemp products with low-THC, fostering a “cannabis light” industry of shops selling CBD soaps, oils and so on made with hemp.  

Italy has had a legal medical marijuana program since 2013, and is considered the second-largest consumer of licensed medical marijuana in Europe, trailing only Germany.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Italy.

Kosovo
  • Medical: illegal
  • Recreational: illegal 

Recreational and medical cannabis are both illegal in Kosovo. Those found in possession of drugs — including cannabis — can potentially face imprisonment of one to three years. First time offenders may be punished with just a fine.

Latvia
  • Medical: illegal
  • Recreational: illegal 

Recreational and medical cannabis are both illegal for sale, possession, or cultivation in Latvia. Possession of a gram or less for personal use is decriminalized as an administrative offense punishable by a fine, but subsequent offenses become criminal cases.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Latvia.

Liechtenstein
  • Medical: illegal
  • Recreational: illegal 

The cultivation, possession, and sale of cannabis are illegal in Liechtenstein for medical or recreational purposes. The country does allow for the medical use of Sativex and Epidiolex.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Liechtenstein.

Lithuania
  • Medical: legal, limited 
  • Recreational: illegal

Medical cannabis has been legal in Lithuania in 2018, but the program is limited and has run into issues. There is no recreational cannabis in Lithuania, but small possession and personal use are administrative offenses punishable by a fine or community service.

In 2013, the country legalized growing industrial hemp.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Lithuania.

Luxembourg
  • Medical: legal 
  • Recreational: decriminalized

Luxembourg is in the midst of creating a legal recreational cannabis program. Plans were first announced in 2018 and a draft of the legislation was released to the public in June 2022. The proposed law would allow residents to cultivate up to four plants and consume at home, but public consumption remains illegal. 

Medical cannabis has been legal in Luxembourg since 2018.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Luxembourg.

Malta
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: legal, limited 

Malta has some of the most progressive cannabis laws in Europe as the first country in the European Union to legalize weed. Malta legalized medical cannabis in 2018 and created a limited recreational cannabis program in 2021. You can legally carry up to seven grams and grow four plants per household. Smoking in public is illegal.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Malta.

Moldova
  • Medical: illegal
  • Recreational: decriminalized 

While cannabis is not legal for recreational or medical use in Moldova, drug use has been decriminalized. Consuming cannabis is an administrative offense, not a criminal charge. Simple possession of cannabis in small amounts for personal use is punishable by a fine or community service.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Moldova.

Monaco
  • Medical: illegal
  • Recreational: illegal 

Both medical and recreational cannabis are illegal in Monaco.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Monaco.

Montenegro
  • Medical: illegal
  • Recreational: illegal 

Medical and recreational cannabis are illegal in Montenegro, which is a major transit country for marijuana produced in Albania on its way to Western Europe. In 2014, the country’s Liberal Party put forward a bill to allow the use of medical marijuana, but it was rejected.

The Netherlands
  • Medical: legal 
  • Recreational: decriminalized 

Medical cannabis has been legal in the Netherlands since 2003, and the country is a major producer of medical marijuana. Recreational marijuana occupies a legal grey area in the country. While the Netherlands is famous for its cannabis “coffee shops,” marijuana is in fact illegal in the country, but for the most part tolerated, and it is legal for sale in coffee shops. Possession of less than 5 grams is typically not prosecuted, though possession of more than this amount, or cultivation of more than five plants is illegal.

Learn more about cannabis laws in The Netherlands.

North Macedonia
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: illegal 

North Macedonia legalized medical marijuana in 2016 and cannabis products that contain less than .2% THC can be purchased over the counter in the country. Recreational marijuana remains illegal.

Norway
  • Medical: legal 
  • Recreational: decriminalized 

Recreational marijuana is not legal in Norway, but possession of less than 15 grams is usually punished by a fine. Also, in 2017 the country voted to decriminalize drug use. Doctors are legally allowed to approve medical cannabis on a case by case basis. 

Learn more about cannabis laws in Norway.

Poland
  • Medical: legal 
  • Recreational: illegal 

Possession of cannabis is still illegal in Poland, but possession of small amounts for personal use is typically not prosecuted. The country approved a medical cannabis program in 2017 and the country also allows legal hemp cultivation.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Poland.

Portugal
  • Medical: legal 
  • Recreational: decriminalized 

Portugal decriminalized possession and use of all drugs in 2001. Possession of more than 25 grams of cannabis can still be prosecuted with a severe jail sentence. In 2018, the country legalized medical marijuana.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Portugal.

Romania
  • Medical: legal 
  • Recreational: decriminalized 

Recreational cannabis possession is illegal in Romania, but the country’s laws view drugs that aren’t “high risk” less severely. Punishment for possession can range from a fine to three months to three years, depending on the type of drug. The country legalized medical cannabis with less than .2% THC in 2013, and in 2019, announced that it is looking into legislation to further legalize medical cannabis.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Romania.

The Russian Federation
  • Medical: illegal 
  • Recreational: decriminalized

Medical and recreational cannabis are illegal in Russia, but as of 2004, possession of less than 6 grams is an administrative offense

Learn more about cannabis laws in Russia.

San Marino

Medical: legal, limited
Recreational: illegal

San Marino legalized a limited medical marijuana program in 2016. Patients can purchase cannabis-based medications like Sativex to treat a number of approved conditions including multiple sclerosis and neuropathic pain. In 2019 the Parliament approved a citizen’s proposal to regulate recreational use of cannabis, but backtracked in March 2020, saying they would wait to follow the lead of Italy.

Learn more about cannabis laws in San Marino.

Serbia
  • Medical: illegal 
  • Recreational: illegal

A few years ago, Serbia appeared to be approving the more liberal approach to medical cannabis that its Balkan neighbors have adopted, but has since backtracked. Recreational marijuana remains illegal, and possession for personal use is punishable by up to 3 years in prison, but punishment may be remitted in minor cases.

Slovakia
  • Medical: illegal 
  • Recreational: illegal

In Slovakia, recreational cannabis is illegal and possession of “three times the usual single dose for personal use” can be punished by up to five years imprisonment. While former Prime Minister Robert Fico had issued support for limited marijuana legalization, such moves have been rejected by politicians in recent years. The only currently approved medical marijuana product is Sativex for multiple sclerosis related spasticity. The country also voted down a push to remove CBD from a banned substances list in 2019.

Slovenia
  • Medical: legal (but highly restricted) 
  • Recreational: decriminalized

Recreational cannabis is illegal in Slovenia but as of 2014, personal use and possession is not considered a criminal offense. In 2014, Slovenia’s government approved a new regulation which allows the use of cannabis products for medical purposes but the program has had problems with access and only a limited amount of patients have signed up. 

Learn more about cannabis laws in Slovenia.

Spain
  • Medical: illegal (decriminalized)
  • Recreational: decriminalized

Possession of cannabis is illegal in Spain, but is typically only enforced in public. For personal use and cultivation at home, cannabis is decriminalized. The country allows a certain level of autonomy by region, and in Catalonia, the country has “cannabis clubs” which resemble the coffee shops of Amsterdam, with a similar vague level of legality. Medical marijuana operates in a similarly vague sphere, and varies by region. The country doesn’t have a nationwide legal medical marijuana program.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Spain.

Sweden
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: illegal

Recreational cannabis is illegal in Sweden and medical use is highly restricted. The country approved medical marijuana in 2012, but the program is highly restrictive. In 2017, the country approved two licenses for patients to use a low THC strain of cannabis for chronic pain. Dronabinol and Sativex are available on a strict case by case basis. In Sweden both drug use and possession are illegal.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Sweden.

Switzerland
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: decriminalized

Switzerland decriminalized possession of small amounts of cannabis in 2013, and if caught with less than 10 grams, the penalty is a fine. Cannabis is still illegal however. Since 2011, the country allows the sale of cannabis with less than one percent THC. The country passed an amendment to its drug law in 2011, allowing the use of cannabis for medical purposes. The country is currently weighing avenues to expand the program.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Switzerland.

Ukraine
  • Medical: illegal
  • Recreational: decriminalized

Both recreational and medical cannabis are illegal in Ukraine. According to Ukrainian drug code, possession of a small amount for personal use is an administrative offense, typically punishable by a fine. The country does allow the cultivation of up to 10 hemp plants. In April 2019, President Volodymyr Zelensky (then a candidate running for the office) stated that medical marijuana “is normal” and that he supported limited legalization.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Ukraine.

The United Kingdom
  • Medical: legal
  • Recreational: illegal

The United Kingdom legalized medical marijuana in November 2018 but there are problems with access and approval of patients. Drug use is not an offense in the United Kingdom, but possession of class B drugs (including cannabis) can be penalized by up to three months imprisonment and/or a fine. In 2004, cannabis had been reclassified from a Class B to Class C drug, but this was changed in 2009.

Learn more about cannabis laws in The United Kingdom.

Vatican City
  • Medical: illegal
  • Recreational: illegal

Medical and recreational cannabis are illegal in the Vatican City, and Pope Francis has come out strongly against drug legalization.

Learn more about cannabis laws in Vatican City.