• Statistique Canada publie son Enquête nationale sur le cannabis
  • Statistique Canada publie son Enquête nationale sur le cannabis

Statistics Canada releases its National Cannabis SurveyCanada

Published 18 March 2024 by AQIC

Younger Canadians are twice as likely to use cannabis than older Canadians

In 2023, more than one-third of adults aged 18 to 24 years (38.4%) and 25 to 44 years (34.5%) reported having used cannabis in the previous 12 months, compared with 15.5% of adults aged 45 years and older.

Frequent cannabis use may be a sign of dependence. A recent study found that almost three in four daily cannabis consumers (72.4%) experienced impaired control over their use of cannabis and were at risk for developing cannabis use disorder.

About 1 in 10 adults aged 18 to 24 years (8.7%) and 25 to 44 years (10.3%) reported having used cannabis daily or almost daily in the previous 12 months, compared with 4.8% of adults aged 45 years and older. Among adults aged 45 years and older, men (6.0%) were more likely to use cannabis daily than women (3.6%), while no gender differences were found for adults younger than 45 years.

Different cannabis products for different age groups

The Cannabis Act first allowed legal sales of dried cannabis, fresh cannabis, cannabis oil, cannabis plants and cannabis seeds in October 2018. A year later, it was expanded to include cannabis extracts, edibles and topicals.

Different cannabis products have a range of potency levels, and the method used to consume the product can affect how quickly the effects are felt.

Across all age groups, the two most commonly used product types in the 12 months preceding the survey were dried leaf or flower (62.1%) and cannabis edibles (57.1%).

Several product types (vape pens and cartridges, cannabis extracts and concentrates, cannabis beverages, dried leaf or flower, and edible cannabis) were more commonly used among younger cannabis consumers compared with older consumers. Other product types (cannabis topicals and oral cannabis oils) were more commonly used among older consumers than younger consumers.

For cannabis consumers aged 25 years and older, dried leaf or flower products were used more commonly among men (70.2%) than women (48.4%), and edible cannabis products were more commonly used among women (62.7%) than men (51.9%). These gender differences were not present for young adults aged 18 to 24 years.

Product safety is the most common reason for buying legal cannabis

With more than 3,000 legal cannabis stores in Canada, over two in three cannabis consumers are buying from the legal market. Among those who used cannabis in the 12 months before the survey, just over 7 out of 10 (71.7%) bought exclusively from legal sources.

The main reasons reported for buying cannabis from a legal source were product safety (38.0%), convenience (16.9%) and a desire to follow the law (12.9%).

TO READ THE FULL REPORT: Statistics Canada