Germany Legalise Recreational Cannabis Usage

In what nest can be described as the wind of change diluting punitive laws, under the first step in the much-debated new legal framework in Germany, adults over 18 are now allowed to carry 25 grams of dried cannabis and cultivate up to three marijuana plants at home.

On Monday, April 1, Germany became the biggest European Union country to legalize recreational cannabis, despite fierce objections from opposition politicians and medical associations

Under the new law “consumers must not tell the police where they bought their cannabis” in the event of a street check, Georg Wurth, director of the German Cannabis Association, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Under the first step in the much-debated new law, adults over 18 are now allowed to carry 25 grams of dried cannabis and cultivate up to three marijuana plants at home.

The changes leave Germany with some of the most liberal cannabis laws in Europe, alongside Malta and Luxembourg, which legalized recreational use in 2021 and 2023, respectively. The Netherlands, known for its permissive attitude to the drug, has in recent years taken a stricter approach to counter cannabis tourism.

As the law took effect at midnight, hundreds of people cheered by Berlin’s iconic Brandenbrug Gate, many of them by lighting up joints in what one participant, a very happy 25-year-old Niyazi, called “a bit of extra freedom.”

Regulated associations will be allowed to have up to 500 members each, and will be able to distribute up to 50 grams of cannabis per person per month.

As the next step in the legal reform, from July 1 it will be possible to legally obtain weed through “cannabis clubs” in the country.