Your medical cannabis prescription label is not just a sticker on the packet. It connects the medicine to you, the dispensing pharmacy, the supply date, and the instructions given for your prescription.
NHS guidance on medical cannabis tells patients to keep prescribed cannabis in its original packaging because the dispensing label contains important information about the medicine and the person it was prescribed for. That matters at home, when travelling, and if anyone needs to check that the product is prescribed for you.
This guide explains how to read the common parts of a UK medical cannabis label without turning the label into a dosing guide or product-selection tool.
What the dispensing label is
The dispensing label is the pharmacy label applied when your prescription medicine is supplied. It usually sits on the product box, tub, bottle or outer packaging.
Exact wording can vary between clinics, pharmacies, manufacturers and product forms. A flower label may look different from an oil label. A pharmacy label may also sit alongside manufacturer packaging, warning statements, patient information and batch details.
The useful patient habit is simple: keep the product in the labelled original packaging and copy details from the label when you need to ask your clinic or pharmacy a question.
Details to check first
When a medical cannabis product arrives, check the basic details before using it.
Useful checks include:
- your name;
- the pharmacy or supplier details;
- the date the medicine was supplied;
- the product name or description;
- the form, such as flower, oil, capsule or extract;
- the quantity supplied;
- the strength or cannabinoid content shown on the label or packaging;
- the directions written for your prescription;
- storage or warning statements;
- the batch number and expiry date, where shown.
If the label does not match what you expected, or if anything is hard to read, contact the pharmacy or clinic before using the product.
Product name, form and strength
The product name tells you what has been supplied. The form tells you what type of product it is. The strength may be shown differently depending on the form.
For flower, strength is often shown as a percentage or cannabinoid content. For oils and extracts, it may be shown as milligrams per millilitre, a concentration, or another product-specific format. Some packaging may also show THC and CBD content or a ratio.
Do not use these numbers to work out your own treatment changes. Strength information helps you identify what you have received and ask better questions. Suitability, amount, timing, route and changes to treatment belong with your prescriber or pharmacist.
For background on the numbers themselves, read THC:CBD ratios explained.
Directions and warning statements
The directions on the pharmacy label are the instructions supplied with your prescription. Read them carefully, but do not guess if the wording is unclear.
Warning statements can also appear on labels, packaging or patient information. MHRA labelling guidance explains that medicine labels and leaflets can carry warning statements to help medicines be used safely. For prescribed cannabis-based products, MHRA guidance also points to normal dispensing-label provisions and special driving warnings where relevant.
If a warning mentions driving, drowsiness, impairment, storage, children, pregnancy, interactions or anything that worries you, ask the pharmacy or clinic to explain how it applies to you.
Batch number, expiry date and storage
Batch numbers help identify a specific manufactured batch. They are useful if the pharmacy, clinic, manufacturer or regulator needs to trace a supply issue or answer a product-quality question.
The expiry date tells you the date after which the product should not be used. Storage instructions tell you how the product should be kept. Many medicines need to be kept away from children, heat, light or moisture, but the exact instruction depends on the product and packaging.
If your label, box or leaflet gives a specific storage instruction, follow that instruction. If you are unsure, ask the pharmacy rather than improvising.
What to do if something looks wrong
Contact your pharmacy or clinic before using the product if:
- your name is wrong;
- the product, strength, quantity or form looks different from what you expected;
- the directions are missing, unclear or different from what your clinician told you;
- the expiry date has passed;
- the product packaging is damaged or unsealed;
- the batch number, storage instructions or warning statements raise a question;
- you cannot tell whether the label belongs to the product in the packet.
This is an admin and safety check, not a complaint. Pharmacies and clinics expect patients to ask when a prescription label is unclear.
For the wider dispensing pathway, read how medical cannabis prescriptions are dispensed in the UK.
Keeping label information useful
You do not need to build a complicated filing system. A few practical habits are enough:
- keep the medicine in the original labelled packaging;
- keep a copy of the prescription or clinic letter if you have one;
- take a clear photo of the label for your own records if that helps;
- record the product name, form, strength, batch and supply date when discussing a query;
- bring the labelled product, or a clear record of the label, to a follow-up if the clinic asks.
NHS guidance says you may need ID that matches the dispensing label and prescription or doctor’s letter when proving you have a prescription. Keeping the label readable and attached to the original packaging makes that simpler.
What this guide cannot decide for you
This guide can help you understand label vocabulary. It cannot tell you whether a product is right for you, whether a strength is suitable, whether a warning applies in your exact situation, or whether you should change how you use your medicine.
If the label raises a clinical question, contact your prescriber, clinic or pharmacist. If it raises a legal question about possession or travel, get proper legal or official travel advice rather than relying on a label alone.
Read next
- How medical cannabis prescriptions are dispensed in the UK
- THC:CBD ratios explained
- What to track after starting prescribed medical cannabis
- Patient guide: getting started with medical cannabis in the UK
Sources
- NHS: Medical cannabis
- NHS England: Cannabis-based products for medicinal use
- MHRA: Supply unlicensed medicinal products, including CBPMs
- MHRA: Medicines packaging, labelling and patient information leaflets
- GMC: Information for doctors on cannabis-based products for medicinal use
- CQC: Cannabis-based medicinal products: what CQC expects providers to consider
Where to go next
- Patient Guide – start from the main MCPH pathway hub.
- How medical cannabis prescriptions are dispensed in the UK – Related MCPH guide
- THC:CBD ratios explained – Related MCPH guide
- What to track after starting prescribed medical cannabis – Related MCPH guide