One of the most searched questions about cannabis is also one of the most practically important: how long does it stay in your system? The answer matters for employment drug testing, legal compliance, medical situations, and simply understanding your own body.
The key fact that shapes everything: THC is fat-soluble. Unlike alcohol, which is water-soluble and leaves the body relatively quickly, THC stores in fat tissue and is released gradually over days, weeks, or months. This is why cannabis has a much longer detection window than most other substances and why the answer is not a single number but a range that depends heavily on usage frequency and individual biology.
Note: This article is a companion to our earlier guide on getting marijuana out of your system, which covers the biology of THC clearance and what does or doesn’t accelerate it. This article focuses specifically on detection windows by test type.
Why Cannabis Stays in Your System Longer Than Other Substances
Most drugs that are screened for in employment or legal testing are water-soluble they dissolve in blood and urine and are eliminated through normal kidney function within hours or days. THC works differently.
After cannabis is consumed, THC is absorbed into the bloodstream and then taken up by fat cells throughout the body. The liver processes THC into metabolites primarily THC-COOH (11-nor-9-carboxy-THC) which are stored in fat tissue and released gradually back into the bloodstream as the body metabolizes fat.
Drug tests don’t actually test for THC itself in most cases. They test for THC-COOH the stored metabolite. Because this metabolite accumulates in fat and is released slowly, it can remain detectable long after any psychoactive effects have completely ended. This is why someone can test positive for cannabis weeks after their last use, even though they are not impaired in any way.
| Important Distinction
A positive cannabis drug test does not indicate current impairment. It indicates past exposure to THC. The detection windows below reflect how long THC metabolites remain measurable in body samples not how long any effects last. Cannabis effects from a single use typically clear within 1–3 hours for inhalation and 4–8 hours for edibles. |
Detection Windows by Drug Test Type
Urine Testing: Most Common Workplace Test
Urine tests are the most widely used drug testing method in employment screening. They measure THC-COOH concentration in urine and compare it to a cutoff threshold (typically 50 ng/mL for an initial screen, 15 ng/mL for confirmation testing).
| Usage Pattern | Urine Detection Window |
|---|---|
| Single use (one-time) | 3–4 days |
| Occasional use (1–3 times per week) | 5–7 days |
| Moderate use (4–5 times per week) | 10–15 days |
| Daily use | 15–30 days |
| Heavy daily long-term use | 30–90 days |
These windows are research-based averages. Individual results vary significantly based on metabolism, body fat percentage, hydration, and product potency. Heavy daily users with high body fat percentages and slower metabolisms represent the upper end of the range.
Blood Testing: Impairment Assessment
Blood tests measure active THC in circulation rather than stored metabolites. They are most accurate as an indicator of recent use and are typically used in roadside impairment testing, post-accident workplace testing, and medical contexts.
| User Type | Blood Detection Window |
|---|---|
| Infrequent user (inhaled cannabis) | 3–4 hours after use |
| Regular user (inhaled cannabis) | Up to 24–36 hours |
| Heavy daily user | Up to 7 days |
| Oral/edible consumption | Longer than inhalation due to slower absorption |
Blood tests are less useful for detecting past use because THC clears from the bloodstream quickly in most people. A negative blood test does not rule out recent cannabis use particularly if more than a few hours have passed.
Saliva Testing: Roadside and Workplace
Oral fluid (saliva) tests are increasingly used for roadside cannabis testing and some workplace programs because they are easy to administer and non-invasive. They detect THC (not just metabolites) in saliva.
| User Type | Saliva Detection Window |
|---|---|
| Infrequent user | 12–24 hours after use |
| Regular user | 24–72 hours after use |
| Heavy user | Up to 72 hours, sometimes longer |
Saliva tests are considered a better proxy for recent impairment than urine tests, but the relationship between detectable THC in saliva and actual impairment is imperfect some research has found detectable THC in saliva up to 30 hours after cannabis use even when behavioral impairment has long resolved.
Hair Follicle Testing: Longest Detection Window
Hair follicle tests have the longest detection window of any cannabis drug test. When THC is metabolized, trace amounts are incorporated into hair as it grows. A standard hair follicle test uses a 1.5-inch segment of hair, which corresponds to approximately 90 days of growth.
| Factor | Detail |
|---|---|
| Standard detection window | Up to 90 days |
| Sample used | 1.5 inches of hair (closest to scalp) |
| What is tested | THC-COOH incorporated into hair shaft |
| Single use detection | Less reliable for single-use detection than urine or blood |
| Most useful for | Detecting regular use patterns over extended periods |
Hair testing is less reliable for detecting single or very infrequent use, as THC metabolite incorporation into hair is lower with minimal exposure. It is most useful for detecting regular or heavy cannabis use over extended periods.
All Test Types: Quick Comparison
| Test Type | What It Detects | Detection Window | Common Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Urine | THC-COOH metabolite | 3–90 days (usage-dependent) | Employment screening (most common) |
| Blood | Active THC | Hours to 7 days | Roadside, post-accident, medical |
| Saliva | THC | 12–72 hours | Roadside, some workplace programs |
| Hair follicle | THC-COOH in hair shaft | Up to 90 days | Legal, extended-period detection |
Factors That Affect Detection Time
Individual detection windows vary considerably from the averages above. Here are the main factors that push detection time longer or shorter:
Usage Frequency (Most Important Factor)
Single use in someone who rarely uses cannabis clears in 3–4 days in urine. Daily use over months builds up a reservoir of stored metabolites that can remain detectable for 30–90 days. The most reliable predictor of your detection window is how often you use cannabis.
Body Fat Percentage
THC-COOH is stored in fat tissue. People with higher body fat percentages store more metabolites and release them more slowly, extending detection windows. Leaner individuals with less fat tissue tend to clear metabolites faster.
Metabolic Rate
Individual differences in liver enzyme activity and overall metabolic rate affect how quickly the body processes and eliminates THC metabolites. Younger people with faster metabolisms generally clear faster than older individuals.
Product Potency
Higher-THC products introduce more THC into the system with each use, building up a larger metabolite reservoir. Regular use of high-potency concentrates or flower above 25% THC extends detection windows compared to equivalent use frequency with lower-potency products.
Hydration
Normal hydration supports healthy kidney function and metabolite clearance. Excessive water intake on the day of a urine test can dilute the sample, which may temporarily lower THC-COOH concentration below the detection threshold but many labs check for sample dilution by measuring creatinine levels and may flag or reject highly diluted samples.
Exercise
Regular exercise burns fat cells, which releases stored THC metabolites back into circulation for eventual elimination. This is a gradual process over time, not a rapid clearance method. Importantly, some research suggests that intense exercise shortly before a drug test can temporarily spike THC metabolite levels in blood and urine as fat-stored compounds are released.
What Does Not Reliably Clear Cannabis Faster
There is a large market for products claiming to rapidly flush or mask cannabis in drug tests. Here is an honest assessment:
- Detox drinks/kits: Most contain diuretics and vitamins designed to dilute urine while maintaining the appearance of a normal sample. They do not remove THC from fat tissue. Results are unreliable and labs may detect sample manipulation.
- Niacin: No scientific evidence supports niacin as a THC clearance method. High doses carry real risks including liver toxicity. Do not use niacin for this purpose.
- Sweating (sauna): THC metabolites are not meaningfully eliminated through sweat. Perspiration is not a significant pathway for metabolite excretion.
- Cranberry juice / herbal teas: No evidence these accelerate THC clearance beyond normal hydration.
The only proven method for reducing cannabis detection window is time and abstinence from use. Supporting general metabolic health through adequate hydration, regular exercise, and healthy diet over a period of weeks supports the body’s natural clearance processes but does not produce rapid results.
Our companion guide covers this in full detail: how to get marijuana out of your system.
Legal Cannabis in Vermont and Drug Testing
Vermont is an adult-use legal cannabis state, regulated by the Vermont Cannabis Control Board. Adults 21 and older can legally purchase and possess cannabis from licensed dispensaries. However, legality at the state level does not override employer drug testing policies or federal law.
Key legal context for Vermont residents and visitors:
- Vermont law protects registered medical cannabis patients from employment discrimination solely based on patient status but adult-use cannabis does not carry the same protection in all workplace contexts
- Employers regulated by federal law (DOT-regulated transportation, federal contractors, etc.) are required to maintain drug-free workplace policies regardless of state cannabis laws
- Private employers in Vermont generally retain the right to test for and prohibit cannabis use check your employer’s specific policies
- Vermont law prohibits driving under the influence of cannabis impaired driving laws apply regardless of legal status
If you are subject to employment drug testing and have specific questions about your situation, consult with an employment attorney familiar with Vermont law. Our Vermont cannabis rules guide and Vermont cannabis safety guide provide more context on responsible use in the state.
Vermont’s Regulated Market and Informed Consumer Decisions
Understanding cannabis detection windows is part of being an informed adult consumer. At Juana’s Garden in Montpelier, Vermont, we believe education matters as much as product quality. Adults 21 and older can browse our menu of independently tested, accurately labeled products, check our deals, and explore our education hub for science-based guides like this one.
Vermont’s cannabis market is transparent about what’s in every product including potency, which directly affects how much THC enters your system and how long it may be detectable. Our guide on reading THC and CBD labels explains how to use that information to make thoughtful choices.
Authoritative Resources
- SAMHSA samhsa.gov Federal drug testing guidelines and cutoff thresholds
- National Institute on Drug Abuse drugabuse.gov THC metabolism and detection research
- Vermont Cannabis Control Board ccb.vermont.gov Vermont adult-use regulatory framework
Frequently Asked Questions: Cannabis Detection
How long does one use of weed stay in your urine?
For a first-time or very infrequent user, a single cannabis use is typically detectable in urine for 3–4 days. This assumes standard lab cutoffs (50 ng/mL for initial screening). Body fat percentage, metabolism, and product potency can affect this range in either direction.
Does legal cannabis use in Vermont affect drug test results?
Legal status does not affect detection. Drug tests measure biological markers THC metabolites in your body not legal compliance. Using cannabis legally in Vermont will produce the same positive test result as using it illegally. Employment testing is governed by employer policies and federal law, which operate independently of Vermont’s adult-use program.
How long does cannabis stay in your blood for a DUI test?
In infrequent users, THC typically clears from blood within 3–4 hours of use. In regular users, it may be detectable in blood for up to 7 days. Vermont law prohibits driving under the influence of cannabis at any detectable level that impairs function. There is no equivalent “legal limit” per se for cannabis blood tests the way there is for alcohol impairment assessment is more central to the determination.
Can I visit Juana’s Garden and get information about cannabis and drug testing?
Our team at Juana’s Garden in Montpelier, Vermont can discuss cannabis products and general educational topics. For specific questions about drug testing and employment law, consult a qualified legal professional. Visit our education hub for more guides, join our Amigos Rewards program, and check our community events calendar. All purchases require valid ID confirming age 21 or older.
Final Thoughts
Cannabis stays in your system longer than most substances because THC is fat-soluble and its metabolites are stored in body tissue. Detection windows range from 3–4 days for a single use to 90+ days for heavy daily long-term use, depending heavily on usage frequency and individual biology. Different tests measure different things urine tests are most common and have the longest window for regular users; blood tests detect recent use; hair tests cover the longest historical period.
The most important takeaways: detection time is primarily a function of usage frequency, not impairment. Legal cannabis use does not protect against positive drug tests in employment contexts. No rapid-clearance method is reliably effective time and abstinence are the only proven factors.
Explore our full education hub, visit Juana’s Garden in Montpelier, and stay informed.
This article is for educational and informational purposes only. Juana’s Garden operates in Montpelier, Vermont, under Vermont Cannabis Control Board regulations. All purchases require valid ID confirming age 21 or older. Nothing in this article constitutes legal advice. For employment drug testing questions specific to your situation, consult a qualified attorney.