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How to Store Cannabis Properly: Keep Your Flower Fresh Longer

A plain-English guide to how to store cannabis: what adults 21+ should know, how to think about it, and where to go for the next level of detail.

·3 min read
How to Store Cannabis Properly: Keep Your Flower Fresh Longer
## The Short Answer Proper cannabis storage preserves cannabinoid content, terpene profile, and flower quality for months to a year or more. For adults 21 and older with flower, pre-rolls, or concentrates, the fundamentals are: airtight container, dark, cool, stable humidity. Doing these right extends product life. ## What Degrades Cannabis **Light.** UV radiation breaks down cannabinoids and terpenes. Sunlight is the fastest degrader. **Heat.** Above room temperature accelerates degradation. Hot storage converts THC to CBN. **Oxygen.** Slowly oxidizes cannabinoids. **Humidity (too low).** Dry flower becomes brittle and harsh. Trichomes shatter. **Humidity (too high).** Mold risk. Significant health concern. **Physical handling.** Trichomes break off with rough handling, reducing potency and visual appeal. ## Storage Basics **Container.** Glass jar with airtight lid (mason jar works well). Plastic bags are worse, they can carry static that attracts trichomes to the bag surface. **Humidity pack.** Boveda 62% packs (or similar) maintain stable humidity. 62% is the standard for flower storage. **Location.** Dark cabinet, away from kitchen heat, away from windows. **Temperature.** 60-70°F is ideal. Avoid freezer (not needed; can cause trichome breakage). **Upright.** Store jars upright to minimize trichome compression. ## Storage Timelines With proper storage: - **Cured flower:** 6 months to 1 year with minimal quality loss. - **Pre-rolls:** 2-3 months optimal. - **Concentrates:** 6-12 months. - **Edibles:** Follow package expiration dates. - **Tinctures:** 1+ years if properly stored. Without proper storage, quality drops in weeks. ## Container Types **Mason jars.** Affordable, airtight with proper lid, widely available. **UV-filtering glass jars.** Better for light protection; a worthwhile investment for consumers storing for longer periods. **Silicone containers.** Good for concentrates. **Vacuum-sealed containers.** Extreme long-term; overkill for most consumer amounts. **Avoid:** plastic baggies, fabric pouches, anything that allows airflow, anything clear that lets light through. ## The Fridge/Freezer Question Most guides advise against refrigeration for consumer amounts: - **Fridge.** Humidity fluctuation with each opening; condensation risk. - **Freezer.** Temperature stable but freezing trichomes makes them brittle, rough handling after freezing causes significant trichome loss. For long-term storage of small consumer amounts, a dark cabinet at room temperature with a humidity pack is usually better. ## Special Cases **Pre-rolls.** Keep in the sealed tube or transfer to an airtight container. Pre-rolls with already-exposed airflow can dry faster than whole flower. **Vape cartridges.** Store upright to prevent oil leaking into the airflow chamber. Cool, dark location. **Tinctures.** Dark glass dropper bottles. Store in cabinet, not on the counter. **Concentrates.** Silicone or glass containers. Freezer acceptable for very long-term concentrate storage; room temperature fine for active use. ## Reviving Dry Flower If flower has dried out, a Boveda pack will rehydrate it over 24-48 hours in an airtight container. Pack the jar, add the humidity pack, leave sealed, check daily until flower is flexible again. Don't overdo it; over-hydrated flower has its own problems. ## Where to Go Next Related reading: [how to choose quality cannabis flower](/blog/how-to-choose-quality-cannabis-flower-what-to-look-for), [cannabis plant anatomy](/blog/cannabis-plant-anatomy-flowers-trichomes-and-what-each-part-does), and [how long does a cannabis high last](/blog/how-long-does-a-cannabis-high-last-factors-that-affect-duration). --- *This article is consumer education for adults 21+. Nothing here is medical, legal, or financial advice. Cannabis laws vary by state, always verify your state's current rules and, for health questions, consult a licensed clinician. For regulated New York retail, verify licensing via the OCM QR-code system at [cannabis.ny.gov](https://cannabis.ny.gov).*