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🍁 Adult-Use: Legal
📋

Overview & Legal Status

Canada's Cannabis Act (SC 2018, c. 16) — in force since October 17, 2018 — legalised cannabis nationally for adult use. The Act establishes federal rules for production, distribution, and possession. Each province and territory is responsible for regulating retail sales, minimum age, where cannabis may be consumed, and additional possession limits. Health Canada regulates federal licences for producers and processors.

Nunavut Key Facts

Governing LegislationProvincial cannabis act; Cannabis Act SC 2018 c.16 (Federal)
RetailerNULC — government retail; community-specific access
RegulatorNunavut Liquor and Cannabis Commission (NULC)
Online SalesNULC Cannabis online — cannabisnunavut.ca
Minimum Age19 years
Official Sourcegov.nu.ca/cannabis
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Licensing

Federal Licences — Health Canada

  • Cultivation Licence (Standard, Micro, Nursery) — nationwide; any producer in any province may hold a federal cultivation licence
    • Standard: commercial scale; no canopy limit; strict Good Production Practices
    • Micro: max 200 m² canopy; simplified requirements; lower application fees
  • Processing Licence (Standard, Micro) — extraction, manufacturing, packaging of cannabis products
  • Analytical Testing Licence — third-party lab testing
  • Sale for Medical Purposes Licence — direct sales to registered medical patients

Nunavut Provincial Licences

  • Nunavut Liquor and Cannabis Commission (NULC) — sole legal cannabis retailer in Nunavut
    • Physical access very limited — one of Canada's most challenging distribution environments
    • Most communities can only access cannabis through the online store with air freight delivery
  • Community-by-community access: Each Nunavut community voted on whether to allow cannabis access
    • Some communities are 'wet' (full access), 'damp' (limited access), or 'dry' (no access)
    • Iqaluit: fully accessible
  • Online delivery — cannabisnunavut.ca; air freight to most communities; significant shipping costs
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Taxation

🧾
Federal Excise Duty$1.00/g or 10% of producer price (whichever is higher) — applies nationally
Tax TypeRateApplies ToNotes
Federal Excise$1.00/g or 10%All cannabis75% fed / 25% NU
Federal GST5%All cannabis salesNunavut has no territorial sales tax
Territorial Tax0%NoneNo PST in Nunavut
Logistics CostHighRemote communitiesAir freight adds significant cost

Tax Implications

  • Nunavut consumers pay only 5% GST — no territorial tax
  • However, remote delivery costs (air freight) can be substantial — effective cost per gram is among the highest in Canada
  • Limited product availability due to supply chain challenges
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Advertising

Federal Advertising Prohibitions — Cannabis Act s.17–s.24

  • Strict nationwide advertising restrictions — the Cannabis Act is among the toughest advertising regimes in the world:
    • No cannabis advertising that is appealing to young persons (defined as under the minimum age)
    • No testimonials or endorsements — celebrity, influencer, or otherwise
    • No depictions of a person, character, or animal (no brand mascots)
    • No association with glamour, recreation, excitement, vitality, risk, or daring
    • No claims of health or cosmetic benefits unless authorised by Health Canada
  • Permitted advertising (very limited):
    • Factual information (brand name, price, strength, availability) in age-restricted venues only
    • Information-only ads in publications mailed to verified adults
    • Brand preference advertising to adults only — no lifestyle content
    • Informational material provided directly to adults at point of sale
  • Required on all cannabis packaging and advertising:
    • Health warning messages as prescribed by Health Canada
    • Cannabis Act health warning symbol (red octagon warning)
    • THC/CBD content per serving and per unit
    • Producer or retailer name and contact information
  • Social media: Age-gating required; no general public promotion; no influencer campaigns; platforms must restrict access to verified legal-age users
  • Penalties: Federal prosecution; fines up to $5 million and/or up to 3 years imprisonment for advertising violations

Nunavut-Specific Advertising Rules

  • Federal advertising rules apply; very limited advertising activity in Nunavut
  • NULC maintains minimal public-facing advertising
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Workplace Rules

Federal Workplace Framework

  • No federal employment protections specifically for cannabis users — however, human rights frameworks apply:
    • If cannabis use is for medical purposes and employee has a disability, duty to accommodate may arise under federal/provincial human rights legislation
    • Employer must demonstrate undue hardship before refusing to accommodate a medical cannabis user
  • Federally regulated industries (aviation, banking, rail, marine, interprovincial trucking) follow Transport Canada and federal safety rules:
    • Transport Canada: zero tolerance for impairment in safety-critical roles
    • Canadian Aviation Regulations: no cannabis within 8 hours of flight duty (some carriers 28 hours)
    • Railway Safety Act: strict zero-tolerance for train operators
  • Cannabis is still prohibited in federally regulated workplaces and on federal government property under the Federal Cannabis Policy for the Public Service
  • Impairment at work is always prohibited — regardless of medical or adult-use status; employer may discipline
  • Drug testing: Not universally permitted in Canada — employer must demonstrate safety-sensitive role or reasonable cause; random testing restricted by human rights law in most non-safety contexts

Nunavut Workplace Context

  • Nunavut Human Rights Act: Duty to accommodate medical cannabis users
  • Government of Nunavut, mining, and construction are major employers — drug policies active
  • Remote work camps: strict drug and alcohol policies common
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Possession & Transactions

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Public Possession Limit30 g dried cannabis (or equivalent) — federal standard
30 g
Public possession
4 plants/household
Home cultivation
19+
Minimum age
30 g
Max per transaction

Personal Possession

  • Adults may possess up to 30 g of dried cannabis (or equivalent) in a public place — federal Cannabis Act limit
  • At home: no limit; 4 plants per household (practical outdoor growing extremely limited)

Transaction Rules

  • Minimum age: 19 years — government-issued photo ID required at point of purchase
  • Accepted ID: provincial driver's licence, Canadian passport, citizenship card, provincial ID card
  • 19+ ID required; NULC online (cannabisnunavut.ca); limited physical access in most communities
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Product Testing

Federal Testing Standards — Health Canada

  • All cannabis products must comply with Health Canada's Cannabis Regulations (SOR/2018-144) — Part 5 (Good Production Practices):
    • Potency testing: THC, THCA, CBD, CBDA — all products before sale
    • Total THC and CBD per serving and per package must appear on label
    • Tolerance: ±10% of stated cannabinoid content
  • Contaminant testing required for all products:
    • Pesticide residue: per Health Canada's List of Authorized Pesticides for Cannabis
    • Heavy metals: lead, cadmium, arsenic, mercury — below maximum residue limits
    • Microbial contaminants: E. coli, Salmonella, Staphylococcus — per Health Canada limits
    • Mycotoxins: aflatoxins, ochratoxin A
    • Residual solvents: for all extract products — below Health Canada limits
    • Moisture content: tested for flower and dried cannabis products
  • Approved laboratories: Must hold ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation; testing conducted in compliance with GPP requirements; labs may be in-house at federally licensed producers or third-party ISO 17025 facilities
    • Health Canada conducts regular inspections of licensed producers
    • Non-compliant batches must be recalled or destroyed per Health Canada recall procedures
  • Certificate of Analysis (COA): Required for every lot/batch; must be available to provincial wholesalers and retailers
  • Track and trace: Health Canada's national cannabis tracking system (CTLS) monitors all product movement from licensed producer to provincial wholesaler
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Medical Cannabis

Canada's Medical Cannabis Programme — Cannabis Regulations (SOR/2018-144) under the Cannabis Act replace the former ACMPR. Medical access is through a Healthcare Practitioner (HCP) document (formerly called a prescription or medical document). Patients register directly with a federally licensed seller. There is no provincial patient registry — medical cannabis is a federal programme administered by Health Canada.

Federal Medical Cannabis Framework

  • Healthcare Practitioner (HCP) Document — A doctor, nurse practitioner, or other authorised HCP provides a medical document (not a prescription) specifying the patient's daily cannabis amount in grams
    • No specific qualifying conditions listed in the Cannabis Regulations — HCP determines suitability
    • Patient and HCP must sign a registration form; patient registers directly with a federally licensed seller
  • Possession allowance: Patients may possess up to 150 g of dried cannabis (or equivalent) OR a 30-day supply based on their daily authorised amount — whichever is less
    • Daily authorised amount set by HCP — no upper limit in regulations (HCP's discretion)
    • Equivalencies: 1 g dried = 5 g fresh = 15 g edibles = 70 g liquid = 0.25 g concentrate = 1 cannabis plant seed
  • Personal production for medical purposes: Registered patients may grow their own cannabis at home based on their daily authorised amount
    • Formula: daily amount (g) × 365 ÷ 4 = maximum number of plants
    • Or register a designated producer to grow on their behalf
  • Designated person production: Another adult may grow on behalf of a patient; max 2 patients per designated producer
  • No qualifying condition list — Canadian medical access is entirely based on HCP discretion and patient need
  • Federally licensed sellers (e.g., Aphria, Aurora, Canopy Growth) sell directly to medical patients by mail with valid HCP document
  • Cost: Not covered by most provincial health plans; some private insurance plans include coverage; federal GST/HST applies

Nunavut Medical Context

  • Medical cannabis is a federal programme — Nunavut does not administer a separate provincial medical registry
  • Nunavut's provincial health insurance plan does not cover medical cannabis costs
  • Veterans' Affairs Canada covers up to 3 g/day for eligible veterans across all provinces
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Adult-Use Cannabis

Differences from Medical Use

  • Age: 19+; medical no minimum
  • Tax: 5% GST; community access restrictions apply
  • 30 g per transaction where accessible

Consumption Rules

  • Permitted: private residences in accessible communities
  • Prohibited: in dry communities, near schools, in vehicles
  • Community-by-community rules — check local status

Local Ordinances

  • Community dry/damp/wet designations critical — many Nunavut communities restrict cannabis
  • Iqaluit: fully accessible; other communities vary significantly

⚠️ Adult-Use Cannabis — Important Warnings

  • You must be the legal minimum age in Nunavut to purchase, possess, or consume cannabis — typically 18 or 19 years of age.
  • Do not drive or operate heavy machinery while impaired by cannabis — impaired driving laws are strictly enforced across Canada.
  • Cannabis cannot be taken across international borders — importing or exporting cannabis is a serious federal offence even between legal jurisdictions.
  • Cannabis is prohibited at all federal facilities, international airports, and border crossings.
  • Consumption rules vary by province — check local bylaws regarding where you may consume cannabis in public.
  • Keep all cannabis products out of reach of children and pets at all times.
  • Cannabis use during pregnancy or breastfeeding is strongly discouraged — Health Canada advises avoiding use.
  • Cannabis can impair memory, coordination, and judgment — particularly at higher THC concentrations.

🚨 Legal Disclaimer

This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Cannabis laws in Canada and Nunavut change frequently. Always verify current legislation with official Nunavut government sources or consult a qualified lawyer.

  • Information reflects laws known as of March 15, 2026 — subject to legislative change without notice.
  • Municipal and local bylaws may impose additional restrictions beyond provincial law.
  • Federal Cannabis Act provisions apply uniformly across Canada in addition to provincial rules.
  • CannBus accepts no liability for actions taken based on information on this page.

📚 References & Sources

  1. Nunavut Cannabis Act (SNNU 2018, c. 7) — Nunavut
  2. NULC Cannabis — cannabisnunavut.ca
  3. Cannabis Act (SC 2018, c. 16) — federal
  4. Government of Nunavut — gov.nu.ca/cannabis
  5. Document date: March 15, 2026 · Cannabis Laws · www.cannbus.org
📅 Document last reviewed: March 15, 2026  ·  Cannabis Laws · www.cannbus.org

⚖️ Legal Notice

CannBus provides cannabis law summaries for general informational purposes only. This is not legal advice.