A cannabis bud being examined at the mail-order hubt of the Kissel Apotheke in Frankfurt.

A cannabis bud being examined at the mail-order hubt of the Kissel Apotheke in Frankfurt.

Photographer: Ben Kilb/Bloomberg
German Weekend Read

Online Cannabis Sales Are Booming in Germany—and the Government Is Racing to Catch Up

Doctors all over Europe are writing prescriptions for mail-order marijuana

A few years ago, Lukas, a 20-year-old who lives outside Berlin, would have had to wander through a park at night or arrange an illicit street pickup if he wanted to buy marijuana. Now, all he needs is five minutes and an internet connection. Since Germany liberalized its cannabis laws two years ago, online telemedicine platforms with suggestive names like Cannadoc24 and Weed.de have become the preferred way for buyers—technically, patients—to access both pharmacist-vetted weed and doctors’ notes to order it legally.

Cannabis is Germany’s new multi-billion-euro industry. Imports of medical cannabis skyrocketed to an estimated 192 tons in 2025—up from 32 tons in 2023, the last full year before the reform. Sales within the country jumped from nearly €1 billion in 2024 to roughly €2 billion in 2025, according to BPC, a business association of pharmaceutical cannabinoid companies. Online pharmacies are at the heart of this fast-growing business, presenting customers with marijuana menus worthy of Amsterdam.