Cannabis Seeds for Nevada Growers
Not sure which variety to choose? Check out our Strain Selection Guide. Learn about our Germination Guide and Germination Guarantee here.
Feel overwhelmed? Text or call M-F, 10-6 EST. (919) 410-6945
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Nevada Cannabis Seeds: Common Questions
Yes. Cannabis seeds are federally legal to purchase under the 2018 Farm Bill, and adults 21 and older can buy them in Nevada. Triangle Hemp ships cannabis seeds directly to Nevada customers. Whether you can legally plant them at home is a separate question that depends on Nevada's 25-mile rule, covered below.
Yes. Triangle Hemp ships cannabis seeds to Nevada. Orders are packaged discreetly and typically go out within 1-2 business days. Questions about your order? Text or call us M-F, 10-6 EST at (919) 410-6945.
Cannabis plants are either male or female. Only female plants produce the buds (flowers) you're growing for. Feminized seeds are bred to produce female plants almost exclusively, so you're not wasting space, time, or resources on males that need to be removed. All of the seeds we sell are feminized.
Photoperiod varieties flower in response to a change in light schedule. Outdoors, they begin flowering naturally as days shorten in late summer. Indoors, you trigger flowering by switching to a 12-hours-on, 12-hours-off schedule. They typically take longer to finish but give you more control over plant size and yield.
Autoflower varieties flower automatically based on age, usually finishing 9-12 weeks from seed regardless of light schedule. In Nevada's qualifying rural areas, the faster autoflower timeline can help northern growers finish before an early frost and help southern growers dodge the worst of the summer heat. Not sure which is right for you? See our Strain Selection Guide.
Autoflower varieties flower automatically based on age, usually finishing 9-12 weeks from seed regardless of light schedule. In Nevada's qualifying rural areas, the faster autoflower timeline can help northern growers finish before an early frost and help southern growers dodge the worst of the summer heat. Not sure which is right for you? See our Strain Selection Guide.
It depends on where you live. Home growing is legal for adults 21 and older only if your residence is more than 25 miles from any licensed adult-use cannabis retail store. Most Nevada residents in cities and suburbs do not qualify under this restriction. Read the full Nevada home grow law breakdown for details.
Up to six plants per person, with a household maximum of twelve plants, for adults who meet the 25-mile distance rule. Nevada counts all plants at all growth stages under NRS 678D.200. There is no separate seedling or immature plant category, so every plant counts toward your total at every stage.
No permit or registration is required, as long as you meet the 25-mile distance requirement and follow all other cultivation rules. If you rent, you also need the written consent of your landlord, who is allowed to prohibit cultivation under Nevada law. Read the full Nevada home grow law breakdown for complete details.
Yes. Nevada law explicitly gives property owners the authority to prohibit or restrict cannabis cultivation on their property. You must own the property where you grow, or have the consent of the person in lawful possession of it. Renters must have the property owner's written consent before growing.
Penalties escalate with repeat violations under NRS 678D.310. A first offense is a misdemeanor with a fine up to $600, a second offense increases to a fine up to $1,000, a third offense is a gross misdemeanor, and a fourth or subsequent offense is a category E felony. For the full breakdown, see our Nevada home grow laws guide.
Yes, if you meet the 25-mile rule and the other requirements. Outdoor plants must be in an enclosed, locked space that is not visible from a public place by normal unaided vision. The extreme summer heat in southern Nevada, where temperatures regularly climb above 100 degrees Fahrenheit, makes outdoor growing in July and August particularly challenging. Use our zone map to find your planting dates.
Nevada spans USDA hardiness zones 4 through 10. The rural areas where home growing is most likely permitted tend to fall in zones 5 through 7 depending on elevation. Northern Nevada growers at elevation usually run an outdoor season from late May through September, which suits short-season and autoflowering varieties. Southern rural growers often do better in spring or fall to avoid peak summer heat. Enter your zip code on our zone map for your window, then browse our full-season varieties, short-season varieties, or autoflowering varieties.
For northern rural Nevada at elevation, start seeds indoors in April and transplant after the last frost, usually late May. For southern rural Nevada, the most workable outdoor windows are spring (February through May) and fall (September through November), treating peak summer as a period to manage around. Check your zip code on our zone map for specific dates, or see our germination guide for step-by-step starting instructions.















