Can You Drive the Next Morning After Weed? Study Finds No Significant Impairment 12–15 Hours Later in Frequent Users

High Times
Thu, Mar 5
Key Points
  • Researchers tested 65 frequent cannabis users and 65 matched non-users 12–15 hours after smoking, finding no significant differences in driving simulator performance despite detectable THC levels in users.
  • Key driving metrics, including speed, following distance, and standard deviation of lateral position (SDLP), showed no meaningful impairment in the cannabis group compared to controls after statistical corrections.
  • Although THC was still present in blood and oral fluid the morning after use, there was no clear relationship between THC concentration and driving ability in this sample of frequent users.
  • The study highlights limitations such as its focus on frequent smokers, use of smoked cannabis only, and simulator-based testing, emphasizing that blood THC levels may not reliably indicate impairment and calling for larger studies involving less frequent users.

Researchers tested frequent cannabis users 12–15 hours after smoking and found no significant differences in simulator performance versus non-users, even with THC still present.

A new study in the Journal of Cannabis Research takes aim at one of the messiest questions in cannabis policy: what, exactly, does “the morning after” look like when it comes to driving?

Researchers recruited 65 frequent cannabis users, defined as people who smoked at least four times per week, and compared them with 65 non-cannabis users matched for age and sex, plus driving experience, annual driving distance, and sleep patterns. Then they did something simple and specific: they brought the cannabis group in the morning after they used cannabis, roughly 12 to 15 hours after their last smoke, put them in a driving simulator, and measured how they performed.

The headline finding was straightforward. Across standard driving and a more demanding “dual task” scenario meant to add distraction, the cannabis group did not show statistically significant impairment compared to the control group after correcting for multiple comparisons. Measures like speed and following distance were also not meaningfully different between groups.

The most commonly cited “weaving” metric in this kind of work is SDLP, or standard deviation of lateral position. In this study, SDLP was actually higher in the control group than in the cannabis group in both standard and dual task conditions, but the difference was small and did not remain significant after correction.

Here’s the part lawmakers and courtroom arguments tend to circle in red marker: THC was still detectable. In the cannabis group, mean blood THC the morning after was 2.8 ng/mL (median 1.2), and oral fluid THC averaged 31 ng/mL. Yet the researchers found no meaningful relationship between THC concentrations in blood or oral fluid and driving behavior after correction for multiple comparisons.

That does not mean cannabis cannot impair driving. The paper is clear that acute effects in the hours after use are well established, and the evidence around residual effects is mixed. The point here is narrower: in this sample of frequent users, using smoked cannabis the night before did not translate into measurable simulator impairment the next morning, at least by the metrics captured in this protocol.

It also comes with real caveats that matter. This is for frequent users, not occasional users. It is smoked cannabis, not every route of administration. It is a simulator, not a real roadway with real consequences. And while participants who smoked the night before reported higher subjective intoxication, that did not map cleanly onto objective driving outcomes once the stats were tightened.

Still, the study lands in the middle of a long-running debate that keeps resurfacing every time a state leans on per se THC thresholds, or treats the presence of THC like a universal proxy for impairment. The researchers’ conclusion is careful but pointed: blood and oral fluid THC concentrations may not be an accurate correlate of driving behavior, and larger studies are needed, especially for less frequent users.

Credit where it’s due: this story was first flagged in coverage by The Marijuana Herald. You can read the peer-reviewed study on Springer’s site.

Photo by Trevor Bvochora on Unsplash