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Thailand Shuts Over 7,000 Cannabis Shops Amid Regulatory Shakeup

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  • Popular Post

image.jpeg

FILE - AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit

Thailand’s Ministry of Public Health has confirmed the closure of more than 7,000 cannabis shops following a sharp decline in licence renewals under a newly implemented regulatory framework. As of January 5th, 2025, the Cabinet-approved regulations prompt stricter control over the cannabis industry, leading to these significant closures.

Previously governed by rules set in 2016, the industry now faces comprehensive changes to ensure better oversight of cannabis sales, exports, and processing. Public Health Minister Pattana Promphat emphasised the need for updated regulations to address the current cannabis landscape and its consumer protection concerns. Under the new rules, sellers must operate at legally designated facilities, and only authorised medical personnel can prescribe and dispense cannabis.

Existing cannabis shops with valid licences are permitted to operate until their permits expire. New applications and renewals submitted after the regulation comes into force will need to follow the new criteria strictly. The changes foresee adjustments for cannabis businesses, but medical patients will not experience any disruption, as hospitals nationwide are equipped to meet ongoing demand with qualified personnel.

Data from the Ministry shows that while 18,433 cannabis establishments were registered up to December 2025, only 1,339 shops renewed their licences, resulting in over 7,000 closures. Looking ahead, the ministry anticipates that 4,587 licenses will expire in 2026 and another 5,210 in 2027. The updated regulations confine eligible premises to specific facility types, such as medical and herbal establishments, and implement stricter storage and staffing standards.

Under this framework, licence holders must own or legally use the property their business operates from. Cannabis products must be stored in environments controlling temperature, humidity, and sunlight exposure.

Personnel must complete training by the Department of Thai Traditional and Alternative Medicine to ensure compliance with safety standards. Existing licences retain validity until they naturally expire, while future applications will undergo scrutiny under tightened criteria, reported The Thaiger.

Key Takeaways

  • Over 7,000 cannabis shops in Thailand closed due to new regulations.

  • Only 15.5% of shops renewed their licences amidst stricter controls.

  • New rules emphasise authorised medical use and stricter operational standards.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now from The Thaiger 2026-01-06

 

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  • Replies 111
  • Views 10.6k
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Top Posters In This Topic

Most Popular Posts

  • PingRoundTheWorld
    PingRoundTheWorld

    While I personally have no problem with people smoking whatever the **** they want at home, there's still plenty of tourists who stink up the place in public. Aside from the fact most tourists aren't

  • KhunHeineken
    KhunHeineken

    It's not just the product for sale that generates money within the economy. It's also the leases on commercial properties, the rural growers, the employment of staff, the utilities bills, constructio

  • KhunHeineken
    KhunHeineken

    Did you even read the article? It says this: "Existing cannabis shops with valid licences are permitted to operate until their permits expire."

Posted Images

  • Popular Post

I bet a big fat reefer that a drive around town will show almost all weed shops still open....

And as far as their new dumb rules....Only lip service will be paid to the rules while being ignored like most other rules are ignored...

  • Popular Post
5 minutes ago, redwood1 said:

I bet a big fat reefer that a drive around town will show almost all weed shops still open....

Did you even read the article?

It says this:

"Existing cannabis shops with valid licences are permitted to operate until their permits expire."

  • Popular Post

Elections are just a month away. Public Health Minister Pattana Promphat noted a new minister could either continue his new regulation or scrap it, depending on policy direction.

This is just another noisy nothing-burger 🤫

  • Popular Post
27 minutes ago, Wuvu2 said:

Elections are just a month away. Public Health Minister Pattana Promphat noted a new minister could either continue his new regulation or scrap it, depending on policy direction.

This is just another noisy nothing-burger 🤫

It's not just the product for sale that generates money within the economy. It's also the leases on commercial properties, the rural growers, the employment of staff, the utilities bills, construction and maintenance of the shops, the supply chain employment etc. It's become a huge industry, very quickly. Too much money for the Thai's to walk away from.

  • Popular Post

While I personally have no problem with people smoking whatever the **** they want at home, there's still plenty of tourists who stink up the place in public. Aside from the fact most tourists aren't even aware it's illegal to smoke it in public - the availability as a selling point to tourists brings around the wrong kind of tourists (broke stoners aren't exactly quality nor do they contribute much to the economy).

So yeah- scrap it. No problem!

  • Popular Post
3 hours ago, Wuvu2 said:

Elections are just a month away. Public Health Minister Pattana Promphat noted a new minister could either continue his new regulation or scrap it, depending on policy direction.

This is just another noisy nothing-burger 🤫

Thailand is a flip flop decision country give it a couple of months back to normal then a couple more it will be back to shut them down again

  • Popular Post
9 minutes ago, MikeandDow said:

Thailand is a flip flop decision country give it a couple of months back to normal then a couple more it will be back to shut them down again


No different from many places. Look at the US where a new president comes in and cancels everything the previous one did through executive orders.

4 hours ago, PingRoundTheWorld said:

While I personally have no problem with people smoking whatever the **** they want at home, there's still plenty of tourists who stink up the place in public. Aside from the fact most tourists aren't even aware it's illegal to smoke it in public - the availability as a selling point to tourists brings around the wrong kind of tourists (broke stoners aren't exactly quality nor do they contribute much to the economy).

So yeah- scrap it. No problem!

I agree with u.Everytime i see pictures and stories from fex Koh phangan i see what kind of people staying there.Hippies and yogateachers who actually want groupsex for payment.Many of these people is so stoned that they hardly know where they are.

And same in Pai!

Hopefully that figure will reach 20000 this year.

Public use is out of control by the selfish dependents.

17 hours ago, KhunHeineken said:

Did you even read the article?

It says this:

"Existing cannabis shops with valid licences are permitted to operate until their permits expire."

So the headline is a lie then.

  • Popular Post

Yeah, during an economic crisis let's throw more people into unemployment.

  • Popular Post
7 hours ago, norsurin said:

I agree with u.Everytime i see pictures and stories from fex Koh phangan i see what kind of people staying there.Hippies and yogateachers who actually want groupsex for payment.Many of these people is so stoned that they hardly know where they are.

And same in Pai!

Hippies? Proof that time-travel is real?

Weed is illegal in Cambodia. There are no licenced shops. Could that be why it is cheaper there?

13 hours ago, PingRoundTheWorld said:

While I personally have no problem with people smoking whatever the **** they want at home, there's still plenty of tourists who stink up the place in public. Aside from the fact most tourists aren't even aware it's illegal to smoke it in public - the availability as a selling point to tourists brings around the wrong kind of tourists (broke stoners aren't exactly quality nor do they contribute much to the economy).

So yeah- scrap it. No problem!

Surely the broke stoners are all stuck at home, not spending hundreds to fly to Thailand 🤔

I have no idea why they ever allowed any to open as the do not created any great tourist addition to my holiday.I only see deadbeats hanging around and really do you want them. The authorities to be are always looking at vote catching crys to win votes but the fact of the matter is Thailand is far to expensive and that is the reason tourist have stopped going there.

As of late I was coming for Dental treatment and frankly it is now the same price as Australia.Crowns, extractions, cleaning filling still very cheap but implants are miles to expensive. Sure the strong Baht has a lot to do with prices.

8 hours ago, norsurin said:

I agree with u.Everytime i see pictures and stories from fex Koh phangan i see what kind of people staying there.Hippies and yogateachers who actually want groupsex for payment.Many of these people is so stoned that they hardly know where they are.

And same in Pai!

you have no idea....

  • Popular Post
8 hours ago, norsurin said:

Hippies and yogateachers who actually want groupsex for payment.

Don't we all? Good work if you can get it 😅

this is just the big players monopolising
as they do again and again
bring in licensing
dish out licenses for everyone
then only renew for a few
they done exactly the same with crypto exchanges here

...Right After The Alcohol-Fueled, Vehicular Mass Slaughter/Massacre That Thailand Just Went Through Again...(?)

...Gotta Question The Motives & The Reasoning...(?)

  • Popular Post
16 hours ago, Wuvu2 said:

Elections are just a month away. Public Health Minister Pattana Promphat noted a new minister could either continue his new regulation or scrap it, depending on policy direction.

This is just another noisy nothing-burger 🤫

Elections 1 month away with the most cannabis friendly party currently in power. I don't think the election will result in more cannabis friendly legislation than what we're getting from Bhumjaithai.

While expat sentiment has always been pro legalization I haven't seen the same from the Thai population. It was only legalized because Prayrut needed Anutin's support to cling to power.

Yes there's been a lot of money invested in cannabis infrastructure, but not by the oligarchs that control the country, and who probably see cannabis as a threat to their heavily protected alcohol monopoly.

I wouldn't investment much in a cannabis license.

  • Popular Post
24 minutes ago, patman30 said:

this is just the big players monopolising
as they do again and again
bring in licensing
dish out licenses for everyone
then only renew for a few
they done exactly the same with crypto exchanges here

I think the speed and size of the weed market caught the powerful families by surprise. As soon as the same families that control booze and smokes get their ducks in a row, weed will be back in force. It will still employ millions up and down the supply chain, but the only ones making the big money will be the usual families. Everyone else will be fighting for their crumbs.

  • Popular Post
14 hours ago, PingRoundTheWorld said:

While I personally have no problem with people smoking whatever the **** they want at home, there's still plenty of tourists who stink up the place in public. Aside from the fact most tourists aren't even aware it's illegal to smoke it in public - the availability as a selling point to tourists brings around the wrong kind of tourists (broke stoners aren't exactly quality nor do they contribute much to the economy).

So yeah- scrap it. No problem!

Problem for tourist!

Not allowed to smoke in the shop, not allowed to smoke in public and not allowed to smoke in the hotel.

Another well thought idea.

I agree with you,broke stoners are almost as bad as broke alcoholics.

Do you drink?

  • Popular Post

This is all sad. The quality of the weed was getting noticeably better. It doesn't seem like actual cannabis lounges were taking off, but it was a start and they were experimenting with different set-ups.

I keep hearing, many times from paid agitators, that it's just dead-beat hippies smoking it, but that isn't what I saw. It was a fun and welcoming culture, until it all got crushed by Thaksin.

9 hours ago, norsurin said:

groupsex for payment

Just asking... Where do they advertise?

57 minutes ago, ftpjtm said:

It was only legalized because Prayrut needed Anutin's support to cling to power.

I disagree... It was the kickstart the economy needed to recover from Covid.
And it worked.

  • Popular Post
15 minutes ago, davb said:

This is all sad. The quality of the weed was getting noticeably better. It doesn't seem like actual cannabis lounges were taking off, but it was a start and they were experimenting with different set-ups.

I keep hearing, many times from paid agitators, that it's just dead-beat hippies smoking it, but that isn't what I saw. It was a fun and welcoming culture, until it all got crushed by Thaksin.

Most of the people saying that are miserable old farang pensioners commenting from their isolated Isan homes, deprived of any proper emotional connection, causing their vile prejudices to fester. From what I've seen, most cannabis shop owners are smart, young Thai people who are very well-educated and very knowledgeable and doing very well for themselves.

21 hours ago, webfact said:

image.jpeg

FILE - AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit

Thailand’s Ministry of Public Health has confirmed the closure of more than 7,000 cannabis shops following a sharp decline in licence renewals under a newly implemented regulatory framework. As of January 5th, 2025, the Cabinet-approved regulations prompt stricter control over the cannabis industry, leading to these significant closures.

Previously governed by rules set in 2016, the industry now faces comprehensive changes to ensure better oversight of cannabis sales, exports, and processing. Public Health Minister Pattana Promphat emphasised the need for updated regulations to address the current cannabis landscape and its consumer protection concerns. Under the new rules, sellers must operate at legally designated facilities, and only authorised medical personnel can prescribe and dispense cannabis.

Existing cannabis shops with valid licences are permitted to operate until their permits expire. New applications and renewals submitted after the regulation comes into force will need to follow the new criteria strictly. The changes foresee adjustments for cannabis businesses, but medical patients will not experience any disruption, as hospitals nationwide are equipped to meet ongoing demand with qualified personnel.

Data from the Ministry shows that while 18,433 cannabis establishments were registered up to December 2025, only 1,339 shops renewed their licences, resulting in over 7,000 closures. Looking ahead, the ministry anticipates that 4,587 licenses will expire in 2026 and another 5,210 in 2027. The updated regulations confine eligible premises to specific facility types, such as medical and herbal establishments, and implement stricter storage and staffing standards.

Under this framework, licence holders must own or legally use the property their business operates from. Cannabis products must be stored in environments controlling temperature, humidity, and sunlight exposure.

Personnel must complete training by the Department of Thai Traditional and Alternative Medicine to ensure compliance with safety standards. Existing licences retain validity until they naturally expire, while future applications will undergo scrutiny under tightened criteria, reported The Thaiger.

Key Takeaways

  • Over 7,000 cannabis shops in Thailand closed due to new regulations.

  • Only 15.5% of shops renewed their licences amidst stricter controls.

  • New rules emphasise authorised medical use and stricter operational standards.

image.png  

Adapted by ASEAN Now from The Thaiger 2026-01-06

 

image.png

 

image.png

The sex trade is has also been illegal for decades but they are still operating so I take this new rule with a pinch of salt.

It makes no difference to me though as I never use either bar girls or drugs. 😃

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