Youth Cannabis Use Continued to Decline in 2025
Summary
The Minnesota Department of Health released findings from the 2025 Minnesota Student Survey showing 96% of students reported not using cannabis in the last month, and a 57.7% decrease in past 12-month use among eighth, ninth, and 11th graders since 2013. The survey, conducted between January and June 2025, is Minnesota's first since adult cannabis use was legalized in 2023.
“There continues to be a steady decline in youth cannabis use since 2013, with 96% of students reporting not having used cannabis in the last month, according to the 2025 Minnesota Student Survey.”
What changed
The Minnesota Department of Health published results from the 2025 Minnesota Student Survey documenting continued decline in youth cannabis use following the state's 2023 adult-use legalization. Key findings include 96% of students reporting no past-month use, a 57.7% statewide decrease in past 12-month use from 2013 to 2025 among eighth, ninth, and 11th graders, and an increase in students perceiving weekly cannabis use as harmful. MDH also published two resource documents: 'How to Talk with Youth About Cannabis' and 'Cannabis Use Among Youth in Minnesota' fact sheet.
State and local public health agencies, schools, and community organizations may use these survey findings to strengthen youth substance use prevention programs and messaging. Parents and trusted adults are directed to BeCannabisAware.org and MDH guidance for age-appropriate conversations about cannabis with youth.
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News Release
April 20, 2026
Youth cannabis use continued to decline in 2025
Health officials take action to help youth and adults get the cannabis conversation started early
There continues to be a steady decline in youth cannabis use since 2013, with 96% of students reporting not having used cannabis in the last month, according to the 2025 Minnesota Student Survey.
The 2025 survey, Minnesota’s first since adult cannabis use was legalized in 2023, showed healthier trends related to student use and perceptions of harms. Minnesota has seen a 57.7% decrease statewide of self-reported past 12-month cannabis use from 2013 (14.9%) to 2025 (6.3%) amongst eighth, ninth, and 11th graders combined. And more students now view using cannabis once or twice a week as moderately to greatly harmful, reversing the trend seen from 2013 to 2022.
The Minnesota Student Survey, one of the nations’ longest-running youth surveys, provides local data to schools about student health, wellbeing and a wide range of topics. Conducted every three years between January and June, the survey anonymously collects information from students in grades five, eight, nine, and 11. MDH, local public health and community organizations also use the data to strengthen youth substance use prevention strategies and programs.
“Despite positive trends, the student survey – indicates that some of our children are encountering cannabis at young ages,” said Minnesota Commissioner of Health Dr. Brooke Cunningham. “We need talk to our children about cannabis before they encounter it because we know the potential harms that early use can bring to their developing brains, mental health and futures.”
There are many opportunities to talk to children and teens about cannabis in age-appropriate ways. You can start with poison prevention, such as telling preschoolers not to eat unknown gummies or candies, as these may have drugs like cannabis. Then you can keep the conversation going throughout childhood and adolescence by focusing on what’s legal and brain health. MDH recently published How to Talk with Youth About Cannabis (PDF) to help parents, and other trusted adults, get the conversation started. BeCannabisAware.org also serves as a central hub for cannabis education including a dedicated “For Mentors” section with conversation tips for parents, teachers, coaches and other adults. MDH researchers collected cannabis-related findings from the survey in the fact sheet Cannabis Use Among Youth in Minnesota (PDF).
-MDH-
Media inquiries:
Scott Smith
MDH Communications
651-503-1440
scott.smith@state.mn.us
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