Thailand’s Ministry of Public Health has introduced stricter administrative penalties for cannabis businesses, including licence suspensions of 30 to 90 days and immediate revocation for serious or repeated violations, in measures announced on 22 June 2026. The move is aimed at strengthening enforcement under the controlled herbal substance framework and standardising compliance across operators nationwide. Get today's headlines by email The Department of Thai Traditional and Alternative Medicine, under the Ministry of Public Health, issued new administrative guidelines under the Controlled Herbal Substance (Cannabis) Notification B.E. 2568. The rules apply to licensed operators involved in research, export, sale, or processing of controlled cannabis herbs for commercial purposes. Authorities said the updated framework is intended to ensure consistent enforcement and clearer compliance standards for both regulators and businesses. Under the new system, a 30-day suspension will apply to offences such as failing to keep required reports PH.T 27 and PH.T 28 at premises, submitting incomplete or missing reports, or not forwarding reports to the registrar. It also covers selling cannabis products without Good Agricultural and Collection Practices (GACP) certification or equivalent standards, failing to display a licence publicly or electronically, and advertising controlled cannabis products. A 90-day suspension will apply in more serious cases, including failing to report export details to authorities and selling cannabis without a medical prescription form PH.T 33 issued by a licensed professional. Authorities stated that suspension periods may be combined across violations but must not exceed 90 days under Section 52 of the Thai Traditional Medicine Protection and Promotion Act B.E. 2542. Immediate licence revocation will be enforced for severe breaches. These include falsified PH.T 27 or PH.T 28 reports, and the sale of cannabis to vulnerable groups such as individuals under 20 years old, students, pregnant women, or breastfeeding mothers without a valid prescription. Other grounds include allowing on-site cannabis smoking, selling through vending machines or online platforms, and distribution in prohibited locations such as temples, dormitories, and public parks. Repeat offences of the same nature following a prior suspension will also result in revocation. Dr Tewan Thaniarat, Deputy Director-General of the Department of Thai Traditional and Alternative Medicine, said the measures were designed to provide a unified enforcement standard for officials and operators. He added that inspections would be stepped up nationwide to ensure compliance and to support the safe, medical-focused use of cannabis while protecting young people and vulnerable groups. The Standard reported that Dr Peera Kookasemkij, Director of the Cannabis Medical Division, said the framework would improve regulatory consistency between state agencies and private operators, with ongoing field inspections planned across regions. Join the discussion? Already a member? Adapted by ASEAN Now TheStandard 23 June 2026
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