Last verified: March 2026
How the Rolling Supply Works
Unlike states that set simple possession limits, Florida manages patient access through a milligram-based dispensing system tracked in real time by the Medical Marijuana Use Registry (MMUR). Each route of administration has its own daily limit and rolling window. When you purchase a product, its THC content is deducted from your route-specific allotment. As purchases "age out" past the rolling window, that amount becomes available again.
Current Limits by Route
| Route of Administration | Daily Limit (mg THC) | 70-Day Supply (mg THC) |
|---|---|---|
| Inhalation (vape) | 350 mg | 24,500 mg |
| Oral | 200 mg | 14,000 mg |
| Edibles | 60 mg | 4,200 mg |
| Sublingual | 190 mg | 13,300 mg |
| Topical | 150 mg | 10,500 mg |
| Suppository | 195 mg | 13,650 mg |
| Aggregate cap (all non-smokable) | 24,500 mg THC per 70-day period | |
| Smokable flower | 2.5 oz per 35-day rolling period (4 oz max possession) | |
How It Works in Practice
The system is dynamic. For example, if a patient purchases 1,000 mg of THC through the inhalation route on Day 1, that 1,000 mg is deducted from the 24,500 mg rolling allotment. On Day 71 — when the purchase ages past the 70-day window — those 1,000 mg become available again. The MMUR system automatically calculates available balances and prevents dispensaries from selling beyond a patient's remaining allotment.
Smokable Flower Is Tracked Separately
Smokable marijuana flower operates on a 35-day rolling period, not 70 days. The limit is 2.5 ounces per 35 days, with a maximum of 4 ounces in possession at any time. The physician must specifically certify smoking as an appropriate route of administration.
No THC Potency Cap
There is no percentage-based THC potency cap in Florida. A proposed 10% cap by former House Speaker Jose Oliva in 2020 was never enacted. Florida regulates through total milligrams dispensed, not product strength. A 25% THC flower and a 90% THC concentrate are both available — the system simply tracks the total milligrams against the rolling allotment.
Aggregate Cap
The aggregate cap across all non-smokable routes is 24,500 mg THC per 70-day period. This means that even if individual route limits would allow more in total, the combined non-smokable consumption is capped. The inhalation route alone can reach this aggregate limit.
Exception Requests
Physicians may request exceptions to these limits through the MMUR using Form DH8031. The OMMU must respond within 14 calendar days. If no response is received within that period, the exception is automatically approved. This mechanism allows patients with higher needs to access additional supply when medically justified.
Checking Your Balance
Patients can check their current rolling supply balance through the MMUR portal at mmuregistry.flhealth.gov. Dispensary staff can also show you your remaining allotment at the point of sale.
For in-depth cannabis education, dosing guides, safety information, and research summaries, visit our partner site TryCannabis.org