Uruguay is on a path to becoming of the main cannabis-exporting countries in the world. The country is planning to boost its recreational cannabis market and attract tourism by allowing non-residents access to both recreational and medical cannabis.
Changes are also expected with medical cannabis, with new regulation that could be passed by the end of the year. We could also see changes in CBD regulation with possible allowance for CBD to be used in foods.
This report provides a detailed overview of the regulatory framework in place in Uruguay for hemp, cannabis and CBD.
Changes are also expected with medical cannabis, with new regulation that could be passed by the end of the year. We could also see changes in CBD regulation with possible allowance for CBD to be used in foods.
This report provides a detailed overview of the regulatory framework in place in Uruguay for hemp, cannabis and CBD.
Table of Contents
1 Executive summary2 Outlook
3 Hemp and CBD
4 Extracts and synthetics as finished products
5 Finished products containing CBD and extracts
6 Import and export requirements
7 Minor cannabinoids
8 Medical cannabis
9 Recreational cannabis
10 Relevant laws
11 Relevant bodies
Methodology
General Methodology/Sources
- Consumer and market participant (manufacturer/brand) surveys.
- Consolidation of publicly available information.
- Legal tracking through legal database checking and sourcing information from government regulators and other law-making bodies.
- Pricing and product information from online and offline retail data gathering, including local fieldwork teams.
- Findings from key industry events and interviews with leading market players and opinion leaders.
- Partnerships with leading research agencies.
- Quantitative and qualitative research and client collaborations.
- Cross-referenced data between markets.
- Tamarind Media proprietary market model.
Please note that each report has its own methodology, so you should always refer to the methodology applied in the report you purchase.
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