Northwest Territories patients follow the same federal personal-production process, with a northern climate that makes indoor growing the realistic option.
Yes. With a valid medical document and a personal-production registration from Health Canada (Part 14 of the Cannabis Regulations), you can legally grow cannabis at home for your own medical use in Northwest Territories. The process is federal — the rules are the same across Canada.
The NWT’s practical challenge is cost and climate, not legality. Power can be expensive in the North, so indoor growers plan carefully. The federal process and age-19 rule apply as everywhere else.
Your plant count depends on your prescribed daily amount (grams per day) and whether you grow indoors, outdoors, or both, using the formula in section 325 of the Cannabis Regulations. The 2026 reality: aim for a reasonable, defensible amount — Health Canada is refusing and revoking registrations tied to inflated counts.
Try the plant calculatorWith a very short season and long, cold winters, outdoor growing is impractical for most of the territory. Indoor setups are the norm, and heating becomes part of the plan as much as lighting.
High northern power prices make an oversized indoor grow especially costly. A modest, defensible amount is both cheaper to run and safer to hold.
Yes, but almost always indoors. The short season rules out most outdoor growing, and the main planning factors are heating and electricity cost rather than the legal process.
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