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Walnut Creek (CoCo), CA, California

Smoking Tolerance Level

[1= very illegal 5=virtually legal]: 4

Marijuana Laws & Legislation for Walnut Creek

California permits both recreational and medical marijuana use. Adults 21 and over can possess up to 28.5 grams of cannabis and eight grams of concentrate. Home cultivation of up to six plants is allowed. Medical users may possess up to eight ounces. CBD products are legal. As of January 1, 2025, licensed dispensaries and cannabis lounges can prepare and sell non-psychoactive food and nonalcoholic drinks while hosting live music and performances. This summary provides up-to-date marijuana laws for California as of 2025.

Please note that marijuana laws are subject to change. For the most current information, consult your state’s official resources or legal counsel.

Law Enforcement

If they find weed on you they make you unbag it and grind it into the ground. The meth epidemic out here makes cops turn a blind eye to any unprocessed drugs (weed, shrooms, etc.). Dealers rarely get cracked down on because they all have 215 cards, and it’d be too difficult to catch them in the act of selling since no one pre-bags.

Where to Buy Marijuana in Walnut Creek (CoCo)

: Friends mostly. You’re usually less than 3 degrees from a slanger. If you’re new to the area hit up one of the pool halls or just wait infront of a 7-11 and talk to whoever buys Swishers or Optimos.

Walnut Creek Marijuana Prices

: Dimes – $10 (.5g – .7g) Dubs – $20 (1g – 1.7g) Henrys – $40 – $50 (3.5g)

Brands

: Anything you want. Mostly reds that’ll go the distance or heady as fuck purps that kinda warrant taking a few vics or percs.

More Information

There’s a reason they call it the “Dub C”

General Calfornia Information:

Marijuana Laws & Legislation for Walnut Creek

California permits both recreational and medical marijuana use. Adults 21 and over can possess up to 28.5 grams of cannabis and eight grams of concentrate. Home cultivation of up to six plants is allowed. Medical users may possess up to eight ounces. CBD products are legal. As of January 1, 2025, licensed dispensaries and cannabis lounges can prepare and sell non-psychoactive food and nonalcoholic drinks while hosting live music and performances. This summary provides up-to-date marijuana laws for California as of 2025.

Please note that marijuana laws are subject to change. For the most current information, consult your state’s official resources or legal counsel.

Law Enforcement

Medical marijuana users with doctor recommendations are fully legally protected in California for amounts up to at least 8 ounces and/or 6 mature (or 12 immature) plants in their home (certain counties listed here http://www.safeaccessnow.net/countyguidelines.htm allow more and certain conditions allow larger quantities sometimes). State police officers must not arrest you if you can show an identification card ($100 or so per year) or show your doctor-written proof of recommendation paper. As long as you keep within the legal quantity. 99% of marijuana arrests in the USA are done by state police officers according to MPP.org so as long as your medical marijuana use is legal in California you will not to have any problems as long as you follow state rules.

Where to buy marijuana:

Medical users can buy at a dispensary (over 150 in the state, mostly in LA and the SF Bay area on the coast) with full legal protection to the quantities they are allowed. Also if an authorized medical user buys off the street they cannot be arrested for doing so as long as they can display a medical marijuana identification card ($100 or so a year) or show their written doctor’s proof of recommendation. Or they could grow their own to the amounts allowed.

More Information

California is a pioneering medical marijuana state; the first “effective” American medical marijuana state since 1996 and the one that allows use for the most conditions (marijuana has shown anecdotal and scientifically proven results for many conditions, more than the 4 or 5 conditions (cancer/nasuea/chemotherapy side effects, HIV/AIDS, chronic pain, glaucoma, or MS or anorexia that the other 11 states have legalized use when recommended (though Maryland has the least protection according to MPP.org)) Plus California has decriminalized other marijuana use to a $100 fine for under an ounce possession and fines for paraphrenalia; no jail time and some cities have set marijuana use in general as the lowest law enforcement priority thus ignoring small time possession much more often.