Nova Scotia patients can grow their own medical cannabis under the federal registration, with a maritime climate that rewards good mold management.
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 Nova Scotia. The process is federal — the rules are the same across Canada.
Nova Scotia’s big variable is moisture, not legality — the federal process is the standard one, and the legal age is 19. Damp coastal air makes mold the main thing to plan around for outdoor grows.
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 calculatorThe maritime climate brings humidity and damp fall weather, so outdoor growers here pick mold-resistant plants and watch airflow carefully; many lean toward indoor or combined setups to control moisture.
A humid climate can hurt outdoor yields, but the answer is better technique, not a bigger authorized amount. Keep your registration matched to your medical need.
It can be, given the humid maritime air, especially late in the season. Mold-resistant plants, spacing, and airflow help — and many growers choose indoor or combined setups to keep moisture under control.
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