Cannabis use among youth is no longer a fringe concern. It is becoming increasingly normalized across schools and communities nationwide. As legalization expands and perceptions of risk decline, educators, health professionals, and community leaders are navigating a rapidly evolving landscape.
To better understand what is happening on the ground, Playbl conducted its 2026 THC/Cannabis Survey, gathering insights from 191 respondents across 36 states, including community-based organizations, government agencies, and school leaders.
The results point to a clear and urgent reality. Youth cannabis use is widespread, increasing, and becoming harder to detect and address.
Key Findings from the 2026 Survey
The data reveals several consistent themes across schools and communities:
•Cannabis use is highly prevalent: 50.8% of respondents report youth cannabis use is very common, while 43.1% say it is somewhat common.
•Use is increasing: 43.6% of respondents have observed an increase in cannabis use over the past 12–24 months.
•Access is widespread and easy: Nearly all respondents indicate that youth can easily obtain cannabis, most often through peer networks.
•Consumption methods are evolving: Vaping and edibles are among the most common forms, making use more discreet and difficult to detect.
Taken together, these findings reinforce what many leaders are already experiencing. Cannabis use is not just present. It is becoming embedded in youth environments in ways that are more normalized and harder to monitor.
A Shift in How Cannabis Is Used
One of the most important takeaways from this year’s survey is the shift in how cannabis is being consumed. Traditional forms of use are being replaced or supplemented by newer, less detectable methods that better align with how youth are accessing and using substances today. These newer methods are easier to conceal, often lack strong odors, and can deliver higher potency. As a result, use becomes more difficult for educators and caregivers to recognize in real time.
Common forms now include:
•Vape cartridges and devices
•Edibles and infused products
•Highly concentrated THC formats
This shift is not just about preference. It is changing how cannabis shows up in schools and communities, requiring updated awareness and response strategies.
Why This Matters for Schools and Communities
The normalization and accessibility of cannabis are having ripple effects across school environments and student outcomes.
Student Behavior and School Environment
Educators report increasing concerns about classroom disruptions, reduced student engagement, and behavioral challenges that may be linked to substance use. As cannabis becomes more normalized, it can be harder to distinguish between typical adolescent behavior and substance-related impact.
Mental Health and Well-Being
Cannabis use is increasingly part of broader conversations around student mental health. Leaders are observing connections to anxiety, emotional regulation challenges, and overall well-being, particularly when use begins earlier or occurs more frequently.
Academic Impact
Schools are also seeing potential academic effects, including difficulty with focus, decreased motivation, and declines in performance. These changes are not always immediate or obvious, which makes early identification and intervention more complex.
The Access Problem: A Growing Concern
One of the most consistent and concerning findings is how easy it is for youth to access cannabis. This is not limited to a single source or environment, which makes it especially difficult to address through traditional prevention approaches.
Respondents point to peer-to-peer distribution as the primary access point, along with increased availability through social and informal networks. For many students, access is not only easy but normalized, with fewer perceived barriers or risks.
This creates a challenging dynamic for schools and communities. When access is decentralized and embedded in social circles, it becomes harder to monitor, harder to disrupt, and less likely to be deterred by traditional messaging. It also reinforces the perception among youth that cannabis use is common and accepted, which further accelerates the trend.
What Leaders Are Seeing
Across schools, community organizations, and public health agencies, there is a growing recognition that the challenge is evolving. Leaders are not only seeing increased use, but also changes in how, where, and why students are engaging with cannabis.
Many are asking how to better identify use when it is more discreet, how to have more effective conversations with students, and how to equip staff with tools that reflect current realities. There is also a growing emphasis on shifting from reactive responses to more proactive, prevention-focused strategies.
Turning Insight into Action
The findings from the 2026 survey highlight the need for a more modern and coordinated approach to prevention and intervention. Awareness alone is no longer enough. Schools and communities need tools, strategies, and resources that reflect how substance use is actually showing up today.
This includes education that aligns with current behaviors, earlier identification of risk, and more engaging ways to connect with students. It also requires collaboration across educators, families, and community organizations to create consistent messaging and support systems.
Playbl supports schools and communities by providing research-backed, engaging solutions designed to meet students where they are. By combining data insights with interactive learning experiences, the goal is to move beyond awareness and toward meaningful behavior change.
Explore the Findings
This blog highlights key insights from the survey, but the full report provides deeper data, breakdowns, and context for schools and community leaders.
Access the full 2026 THC/Cannabis Survey Report to explore the findings in more detail and share them with your team.