Cannabis Packaging Requirements Canada: Federal Rules + Provincial Breakdown (2026)


Alternative Text
GrowerIQ Team
GrowerIQ Team is the team behind GrowerIQ, a global seed-to-sale ERP and compliance platform helping regulated cannabis and hemp operators stay compliant, efficient, and audit-ready. We share insights on regulations, operations, and technology shaping regulated markets worldwide.

What are the cannabis packaging rules in each Canadian province?

Licensed cannabis producers shipping product across Canada must comply with two layers of regulation: the federal Cannabis Regulations enforced by Health Canada, and province-specific rules that vary from coast to coast. Missing a provincial excise stamp colour, overlooking Quebec’s stricter edible limits, or misunderstanding Ontario’s retail display changes can mean delayed shipments, rejected product, or compliance findings.

This guide covers both layers — the federal baseline every producer must meet, followed by a full provincial breakdown of the rules that differ by jurisdiction. Use it to ensure your packaging program is compliant everywhere you sell, not just in your home province.


Federal Health Canada Packaging Requirements — The Baseline

Every cannabis product sold in Canada must comply with Part 6 of the Cannabis Regulations (SOR/2018-144) under the Cannabis Act. These federal rules apply regardless of which province the product is sold in.

Plain Packaging

  • Single, uniform colour — no fluorescent, metallic, or glossy finishes
  • No images, graphics, or illustrations except one brand element (logo) within strict size limits
  • Smooth surfaces only — no embossing, engraving, or decorative textures
  • No added scents or sound-producing features
  • All text in a single, uniform font style and colour

Mandatory Label Elements

Every cannabis product label must include — in both English and French:

Element Key Rule
Standardized cannabis symbol Red hexagon with "THC" — upper-left 25% of principal display panel, min. 1.27 cm x 1.27 cm
Health warning message Yellow background, "WARNING" in bold uppercase, font size ≥ brand name
THC and CBD content Total THC and Total CBD per package (and per serving/activation where applicable)
Brand name and product name Principal display panel
Class of cannabis Dried cannabis, extract, edible, topical, etc.
Net weight/volume Metric units
Licence holder name + contact Name, telephone, email
Lot/batch number Must match production records
Packaging date Date sealed in final packaging
Excise stamp Federal + provincial stamp (colour-coded by jurisdiction)

Child-Resistant and Tamper-Evident

  • All cannabis products (except plants and seeds) must use child-resistant containers
  • All products must include a tamper-evident feature (shrink band, breakable seal, tear strip, etc.)
  • Packaging must be opaque — product not visible from outside

2025 Amendments and 2026 Deadlines

The March 12, 2025 regulatory amendments introduced several changes:

  • Peel-back/accordion labels and QR codes are now permitted
  • Transparent packaging and cut-out windows allowed for dried cannabis, fresh cannabis, and seeds (with plain-packaging restrictions)
  • Informational inserts/leaflets may be included
  • Container cap and body may be different colours
  • Only Total THC and Total CBD required (simplified from previous potency format)
  • March 12, 2026 deadline: THC/CBD actual quantity can no longer appear in bold font — producers must update label templates before this date

“After March 12, 2026, the actual THC and CBD quantity on cannabis labels can no longer appear in bold font — a transition deadline many producers are still not prepared for.” — Canada Gazette, Vol. 159, No. 6

Cannabis Excise Stamps by Province — The Colour-Coded System

Every cannabis product entering the Canadian retail market must carry a cannabis excise stamp issued by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). Each province and territory has its own colour-coded stamp bearing the jurisdiction’s initials in white text alongside bilingual text reading "Duty Paid / Canada / Droit Acquitté."

Licensed producers must determine the destination province before the product leaves their facility and affix the correct stamp. Shipping product with the wrong provincial stamp is a compliance violation.

Excise Stamp Placement Rules

Under the Stamping and Marking Regulations, stamps must be:

  • Affixed in a conspicuous place on the package
  • Applied in a manner that seals the package
  • Designed to remain affixed after the package is opened
  • Positioned so they do not obstruct required label information or security features

Provincial Excise Stamp Colours

There are 13 unique colour-coded stamps — one for each province and territory. The stamp colour is assigned by jurisdiction:

Province / Territory Stamp Colour
British Columbia Teal
Alberta Orange
Saskatchewan Yellow-green
Manitoba Grey*
Ontario Yellow
Quebec Blue
New Brunswick Purple
Nova Scotia Green
Prince Edward Island Brown
Newfoundland and Labrador Red
Yukon Pink
Northwest Territories Silver
Nunavut Gold

\Manitoba is the only jurisdiction that has not entered into a coordinated cannabis taxation agreement with the federal government. Cannabis products sold in Manitoba carry only the federal excise duty — no additional provincial cannabis duty is imposed. All other provinces and territories are "specified provinces" with additional provincial duty.*


Province-by-Province Cannabis Packaging and Retail Rules

While federal rules set the packaging baseline, each province adds its own layer — governing retail models, display standards, product restrictions, and distribution requirements. Here is what licensed producers need to know for each major market.

Ontario

Regulator: Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) Retail model: Mixed — government online (OCS) + private licensed retail stores Minimum age: 19

Key packaging and retail rules:

  • All retail cannabis must be purchased from OCS Wholesale — retailers cannot buy directly from licensed producers
  • Products must be sold in original, unopened packaging that complies with federal standards
  • Window display rules relaxed (May 2025): The AGCO removed the requirement that cannabis and accessories not be visible from store exteriors, making Ontario retail environments more welcoming
  • Sensory display containers are permitted — locked, tamper-proof containers that allow customers to see and smell cannabis without touching it
  • Retailers must display the Ontario cannabis retail seal (min. 17 cm x 20 cm) visible from the store exterior
  • Retailers must display their Retail Store Authorization (RSA) in a conspicuous location inside the store
  • Online compliance (July 2025): Retailers must submit their website address to the AGCO and demonstrate online compliance with retail seal and RSA display requirements

Quebec

Regulator: Société québécoise du cannabis (SQDC) Retail model: Government monopoly — only the SQDC can sell cannabis retail (in-store and online) Minimum age: 21 (highest in Canada — raised from 18 in January 2020)

Key packaging and retail rules — stricter than federal:

  • Edible restrictions are the strictest in Canada:
    • Solid edibles: max 10 mg THC per package (same as federal), but max 5 mg THC per distinguishable portion unit
    • Liquid edibles: max 5 mg THC per container (federal allows 10 mg)
    • No edibles that resemble sweets, confectionery, dessert, chocolate, or any product attractive to persons under 21
  • Packaging cannot be used for promotional or advertising purposes — only brands and informational elements may appear (stricter interpretation than federal plain-packaging rules)
  • Government may require producers to print specific messages determined by the Minister on cannabis packaging
  • All product available through SQDC only — producers must be listed as SQDC suppliers

Alberta

Regulator: Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis (AGLC) Retail model: Private licensed retail stores + AGLC online Minimum age: 18 (lowest in Canada, matching federal minimum)

Key packaging and retail rules:

  • AGLC handles wholesale distribution — all licensed cannabis enters the province through AGLC before reaching private retailers
  • AGLC enforces clear oversight over the distribution of sealed, pre-packaged cannabis products — no repackaging or bulk sales
  • Products must carry the Alberta orange excise stamp
  • Retailers cannot open or repackage any products
  • Cannabis stores must be at least 100 metres from schools, hospitals, and other sensitive locations (varies by municipality)
  • Delivery allowed through licensed delivery holders or national carriers with ID verification

British Columbia

Regulator: BC Liquor Distribution Branch (BCLDB) Retail model: Mixed — government stores (BC Cannabis Stores) + private licensed retail Minimum age: 19

Key packaging and retail rules:

  • BCLDB is the sole wholesale distributor — retailers must purchase all cannabis from the LDB, not directly from licensed producers
  • Only pre-packaged, federally compliant product is distributed — no bulk product, no retailer repackaging or custom branding
  • Products must carry the BC teal excise stamp
  • Cannabis must be sold in its original packaging that has never been opened
  • Initial product assortment was limited to dried flower, pre-rolls, oils, capsules, and seeds — now expanded to all federally approved categories
  • Cannabis retail stores must comply with municipal zoning bylaws and BC Cannabis Licensing Regulation requirements

Saskatchewan

Regulator: Saskatchewan Liquor and Gaming Authority (SLGA) Retail model: Private licensed only — Saskatchewan is one of the few provinces where retailers can purchase directly from federally licensed producers (no government wholesale intermediary) Minimum age: 19

Key packaging and retail rules:

  • Unique in Canada: retailers purchase directly from licensed producers — no provincial wholesale monopoly
  • All federal packaging and labelling standards apply
  • Retail permit application fee: $2,200, annual permit fee: $3,300 (city) / $1,650 (non-city)
  • Criminal background checks required for all owners and partners
  • Detailed security measures required for retail locations

Manitoba

Regulator: Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries (MBLL) Retail model: Private licensed retail stores + MBLL online Minimum age: 19

Key packaging and retail rules:

  • Manitoba is the only province without a coordinated cannabis taxation agreement with the federal government — no additional provincial excise duty is imposed
  • Products distributed through Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries as exclusive wholesale distributor
  • Cannabis stores must be at least 200 metres from schools, religious institutions, and public parks
  • Delivery available through licensed delivery holders, national carriers (with ID), and store staff
  • All federal packaging standards apply — no additional provincial packaging requirements beyond distribution and zoning

New Brunswick

Regulator: Cannabis NB (government-operated) Retail model: Government monopoly — Cannabis NB operates all retail stores and online sales Minimum age: 19

Key packaging and retail rules:

  • All cannabis sold through government-operated stores only (Cannabis NB)
  • Products carry the New Brunswick purple excise stamp
  • Buffer zones keep stores away from municipality-designated sensitive sites
  • All federal packaging and labelling standards apply
  • Government controls product selection, pricing, and display

Nova Scotia

Regulator: Nova Scotia Liquor Corporation (NSLC) Retail model: Government monopoly — NSLC operates all retail cannabis stores Minimum age: 19

Key packaging and retail rules:

  • All cannabis sold through NSLC stores — the same Crown corporation that sells alcohol
  • Products carry the Nova Scotia green excise stamp
  • All federal packaging standards apply
  • Government controls shelf placement, product selection, and in-store presentation

Prince Edward Island

Regulator: PEI Cannabis Management Corporation Retail model: Government-operated stores and online Minimum age: 19

Newfoundland and Labrador

Regulator: Cannabis Licensing Registrar (Department of Finance) Retail model: Mixed — government online (Cannabis NL) + private licensed retail Minimum age: 19

Yukon, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut

All three territories follow federal baseline rules with government-controlled distribution. Minimum age is 19 across all territories. Nunavut uses a private retail model, while Yukon and NWT use government-operated models.


“Quebec is the only province with a legal cannabis age of 21, and its edible restrictions — including a 5 mg THC limit per serving unit and a ban on candy-like products” — are the strictest in Canada.

Provincial Comparison Table — Key Differences at a Glance

Province Min. Age Retail Model Wholesale Excise Stamp Additional Provincial Rules
Ontario 19 Mixed (govt + private) OCS Wholesale (mandatory) Yellow Sensory displays allowed; window visibility rules removed (2025); retail seal required
Quebec 21 Govt monopoly (SQDC) SQDC only Blue Strictest edibles rules (5 mg/serving, 5 mg liquid); no candy/confection-style products
Alberta 18 Private retail AGLC Wholesale Orange Lowest min. age; 100m buffer from sensitive sites; delivery allowed
British Columbia 19 Mixed (govt + private) BCLDB (mandatory) Teal No retailer repackaging; municipal zoning requirements
Saskatchewan 19 Private retail Direct from producers Yellow-green Only province with direct producer-to-retailer purchasing
Manitoba 19 Private retail MBLL (mandatory) Grey No additional provincial excise duty; 200m buffer from schools/parks
New Brunswick 19 Govt monopoly Cannabis NB Purple Government controls all retail and product selection
Nova Scotia 19 Govt monopoly (NSLC) NSLC Green Sold through same stores as alcohol
PEI 19 Govt-operated PEI Cannabis Brown Small market, limited retail locations
Newfoundland 19 Mixed (govt + private) Mixed Red Private retail + government online
Yukon 19 Govt-operated Govt-controlled Pink Territory-level distribution
NWT 19 Govt-operated Govt-controlled Silver Territory-level distribution
Nunavut 19 Private retail Govt-controlled Gold Remote distribution challenges

How GrowerIQ Supports Multi-Province Packaging Compliance

Selling cannabis across multiple Canadian provinces means managing different excise stamps, varying wholesale requirements, and jurisdiction-specific product restrictions — all while maintaining the federal packaging baseline. This is where seed-to-sale tracking software becomes essential.

Province-Specific Lot Tracking

GrowerIQ tracks lot and batch numbers from propagation through final packaging, linking every finished product to its complete production history. When packaging product destined for different provinces, the system records which lots are assigned to which jurisdiction — critical for ensuring the correct excise stamp is affixed and the right product mix ships to the right market (e.g., Quebec-compliant edibles vs. products destined for Alberta).

Label Data Accuracy Across Jurisdictions

THC and CBD values are pulled from verified lab results stored in GrowerIQ, eliminating the manual transcription errors that cause the majority of cannabis recalls in Canada. When producing labels for multiple provinces simultaneously, a single source of truth prevents the most costly compliance mistake in the industry.

Multi-Province Recall Readiness

If a recall affects product shipped to multiple provinces, GrowerIQ enables rapid lot-level tracing across all jurisdictions. Compliance officers can identify every package associated with a specific lot, which provincial distributor received it, and which retail partners have it on shelf — exactly the data Health Canada and provincial regulators require.

CTS Reporting Integration

GrowerIQ integrates with Health Canada’s Cannabis Tracking System, ensuring that packaging, inventory, and distribution data reported to the federal regulator matches what is physically in the market across all provinces.


Frequently Asked Questions

Do cannabis packaging rules differ by province in Canada?

Yes. While federal Health Canada rules set the packaging baseline that applies nationally (plain packaging, health warnings, standardized cannabis symbol, child-resistant containers, bilingual labelling), each province adds its own layer. The most significant provincial differences are: excise stamp colours (each province has a unique colour-coded stamp), wholesale distribution models (some provinces require a government intermediary, while Saskatchewan allows direct producer-to-retailer sales), retail display rules (Ontario recently relaxed window visibility requirements), and product restrictions (Quebec imposes stricter edible THC limits than federal law). Licensed producers must comply with both federal and provincial rules for every jurisdiction they sell into.

Why does each province have a different coloured excise stamp?

The colour-coded excise stamp system allows instant visual identification of which province a cannabis product is authorized for sale in. Each stamp bears the jurisdiction’s initials and a unique colour band. This system supports the coordinated cannabis taxation framework — all provinces except Manitoba impose an additional provincial excise duty on top of the federal duty, and the stamp confirms that both duties have been paid. Producers must affix the correct provincial stamp before product leaves their facility, as shipping product with the wrong stamp is a compliance violation.

Which province has the strictest cannabis packaging and product rules?

Quebec has the strictest rules overall. It is the only province with a minimum cannabis age of 21 (vs. 18-19 elsewhere), imposes a 5 mg THC per serving unit limit on solid edibles and a 5 mg THC per container limit on liquid edibles (vs. federal 10 mg), and prohibits any edible that resembles sweets, confectionery, dessert, or chocolate. Quebec also operates a government monopoly through the SQDC — the only retail channel for cannabis in the province.

What happens if I ship cannabis with the wrong provincial excise stamp?

Shipping cannabis to a province with the wrong excise stamp is a violation of the Excise Act, 2001 and the Stamping and Marking Regulations. The product cannot be legally sold, and the licensed producer may face penalties from the CRA. Producers must confirm the destination jurisdiction and affix the correct colour-coded stamp before the product leaves their premises. Using seed-to-sale tracking software like GrowerIQ helps manage multi-province shipments by recording which lots are destined for which jurisdictions.


This guide is current as of March 2026 and reflects the Cannabis Regulations amendments published on March 12, 2025, plus provincial regulatory updates through early 2026. For official and up-to-date requirements, always refer to Health Canada’s Packaging and Labelling Guide, the Cannabis Regulations (SOR/2018-144), and your provincial regulatory body. For broader compliance guidance, see our Canada cannabis compliance guide.


Sources:

Ready to Streamline Your Cannabis Compliance?

See how GrowerIQ helps cannabis facilities maintain compliance and traceability across every market.

REQUEST DEMO

About GrowerIQ

GrowerIQ is a complete cannabis production management platform. Ours is the first platform to integrate your facility systems, including sensors, building controls, QMS, and ERP, into a single simplified interface.

GrowerIQ is changing the way producers use software - transforming a regulatory requirement into a robust platform to learn, analyze, and improve performance.

To find out more about GrowerIQ and how we can help, fill out the form to the right, start a chat, or contact us.

Start today.

Let us know how to reach you, and we'll get in touch to discuss your project.

GrowerIQ does not share, sell, rent, or trade personally identifiable information with third parties for promotional purposes. Privacy Policy