What the new study found (and why it surprised researchers)
Researchers from the University of Colorado Anschutz analyzed UK Biobank data using a sample of 26,362 adults aged 40–77 (average age around 55).Their goal was to examine an understudied group: older adults. Cannabis-brain research has mainly focused on teenagers and young adults. This is due to concerns about early exposure and less common use among older adults in the past.
The study found that greater lifetime cannabis use correlated with larger brain regions and better cognitive function in learning, processing speed, and short-term memory. Positive associations were found in CB1 receptor-rich regions, including the hippocampus, amygdala, caudate, and putamen—areas involved in memory, emotion, and learning.
Importantly, the findings weren’t uniformly “more use = more benefit.” Moderate cannabis use often showed the best results, while some measures showed the highest-use group performed best, suggesting a dose-dependent relationship. The study also found effects varied by sex.
Why might this happen?
The study itself discusses possible biological explanations that are plausible (but not proven here). One idea is that the endocannabinoid system may influence inflammation, immune signaling, and neurodegeneration, which are highly relevant to aging brains. In other words, if the aging brain is vulnerable to inflammatory and degenerative changes, interacting with cannabinoid pathways could look very different at 60 than it does at 16.
Another key point: “bigger brain volume” is not automatically “better.” But in aging research, loss of volume in certain regions can be associated with neurodegeneration and cognitive decline, so maintained volume can be interpreted as potentially favorable—especially when it aligns with better cognitive test performance. The researchers explicitly frame it as complex and nuanced rather than a blanket endorsement.
The big limitation: this study can’t prove cannabis caused better brain outcomes
This is where responsible reading matters. The UK Biobank analysis is observational and cross-sectional, which means it measures associations at a point in time, not cause-and-effect.
There are also practical data gaps:
-
Cannabis use was self-reported and categorical, not a precise measurement of dose over time.
-
The dataset didn’t capture key details like THC/CBD ratios, potency, route of use (smoking vs edibles), or product type—all of which can change the risk profile.
-
Other “hidden variables” could be driving the relationship (for example: lifestyle factors, socioeconomic differences, health behaviors, or why people used cannabis in the first place).
In this large sample of adults aged 40–77, cannabis use history correlated with certain brain and cognitive measures in an unexpected way. This does not mean cannabis is a guaranteed brain booster.
How this fits with other cannabis research (the part that keeps the story balanced)
One reason this finding is so headline-grabbing is that it contrasts with evidence in younger adults. A study of young adults (22-36) showed that heavy cannabis users had diminished brain activity during working memory tasks, which led to reduced performance. This reinforces a theme researchers increasingly discuss: cannabis effects may be age-dependent, and “adult” is not one uniform category.
Health effects beyond cognition also matter—especially for older adults, many of whom have higher baseline cardiovascular risk. Stanford experts warn that regular cannabis use correlates with increased heart attack and stroke. They also highlight concerns about dosing, product strength, drug interactions, and fall risks. One study found higher cardiovascular risks in users under 50. Even with promising brain benefits, other risks remain, especially based on health history, dosage, and method of use.
Practical, adult-oriented takeaways
For adults wondering “Is cannabis good for me?”, the best answer is: it depends, and we lack definitive proof.
What you can do today:
-
Treat this new finding as intriguing, not conclusive.
-
If you’re middle-aged or older and using cannabis for sleep, pain, or anxiety, consider discussing it with a clinician—especially if you have cardiovascular disease risk, take blood thinners, or have medication interactions to worry about.
-
Be cautious about potency and dosing. Today’s products can be much stronger than what many people remember, increasing the odds of overconsumption (particularly with edibles).
Bottom line
The “surprising” study doesn’t flip the cannabis conversation into “it’s healthy for everyone.” The study suggests a nuanced relationship between cannabis and the brain across a lifespan. Future research should examine cannabis use, brain function, cognitive maintenance during aging, especially in older adults.