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BackCannabis Yield: How to Get the Most from Every Plant

30.10.2025

Cannabis Yield: How to Get the Most from Every Plant
Cannabis Yield: How to Get the Most from Every Plant

Here you can find out what really makes your cannabis plants productive. First, a brief overview, followed by a detailed explanation in the text below. So that your grow is successful and yields a lot of weed.

 

Quick answer on cannabis yield:

Indoors, 500–700 g/m² is realistic; very dialed-in setups with training/CO₂ can reach ~900 g/m². Yield per plant varies widely by type: autoflower 40–200 g, photoperiod indoors often 300–600 g, outdoors under ideal conditions up to >1 kg.

  • Flower PPFD: 600–900 μmol m⁻² s⁻¹ (DLI ~30–45 mol)
  • Grams per watt benchmarks: 1.0–1.8 (pro-level setups up to ~2.0)
  • Key drivers: genetics, light density, climate, pH/EC, training

 

How much yield can a cannabis plant really produce? That question matters to everyone—from first-time growers to seasoned cultivators. Cannabis yield depends on many factors: strain, lighting, climate, nutrients, training, and of course experience. With the right strategy, you can achieve impressive results in small spaces—indoors and outdoors. This guide shows how to increase cannabis yield, which factors move the needle, which strains deliver the highest yields, and how to avoid common mistakes.

 

How much yield per plant is realistic?

Yield per plant varies a lot—from 20 g on a small autoflower to 800 g in optimal outdoor conditions. Realistic reference ranges:

  • Indoor grow: 300–600 g/m² with 6–16 plants
  • Outdoor: 200–800 g per plant (more on large specimens)
  • Autoflower: 40–300 g per plant (pot size, light & care are decisive)

 

 

For indoor grows, focus less on absolute per-plant numbers and more on yield per m² and yield per watt. With quality LED fixtures (e.g., 300–600 W), 1.0–1.8 g/W is realistic. Outdoors, autoflowers benefit from peak summer light—very early or very late starts usually mean noticeably less.

 

Setup Typical yields Notes
Benchmarks are guidelines and depend on genetics, light density, pH/EC, training & grower experience.
Indoor 300–700 g/m² (beginner–intermediate), advanced up to ~900 g/m² Strong LED coverage (PPFD), stable climate, training (LST/SCROG)
Outdoor 200–800 g per plant; top cases >1 kg Site choice, season length, soil biology and nutrient program are key
Autoflower 40–300 g per plant Container volume, summer window, and water/nutrient management

 

Which factors influence cannabis yield?

 

1) Light intensity and spectrum

The more usable light a plant gets in veg and flower, the more energy it can convert into buds. Modern full-spectrum LEDs deliver top results. Rule of thumb: 300–600 W LED for 1 m². What matters most is uniform coverage, not just wattage. A high-efficiency LED (≥2.3 μmol/J) pays for itself quickly.

 

 

2) Nutrient management

Too much nitrogen in flower suppresses bud building; too little potassium/phosphorus directly limits cannabis yield. Clean pH/EC management is a must. See also: Using nutrients correctly.

 

3) Climate and airflow

Ideal is 22–28 °C (72–82 °F) by day, 18–22 °C (64–72 °F) at night. RH 60–70% in veg, 40–50% in flower. Regular fresh air and internal circulation reduce mold risk and stabilize your harvest size.

 

4) Pot size and substrate

More root room = more potential. Indoors, 7–11 L per plant is common (autoflowers often 9–15 L); outdoors 30–50 L+. Soil–coco mixes with perlite improve air/water balance. More here: Soil or coco?

 

5) Strain and genetics

Genetics are the foundation. Indica-leaning hybrids often stack compact, heavy buds; sativas tend to form airier, larger inflorescences. Browse high-yield feminized strains or high-yield autoflowers.

 

 

Tips & tricks to boost cannabis yield

1) Plant training (LST, HST, SCROG, topping)

Use LST for a flatter, more even canopy; SCROG maximizes yield per m²; apply topping/HST deliberately (in veg).

 

 

2) Optimal fertilization & boosters

Root and bloom stimulators like Root Juice, Bud Booster or Organic PK Booster complement your base feed. Important: manage pH/EC precisely, ramp dosage gradually, check runoff regularly.

 

3) CO₂ as a multiplier

Indoors, moderate CO₂ enrichment (up to ~1,200 ppm) with strong LEDs can add 10–20% yield—only for advanced setups with full climate control.

 

4) Strengthen roots

Healthy roots = better nutrient efficiency. Clean substrate (enzymes), adequate root volume, and stable moisture increase your harvest size.

 

 

5) Harvest timing

Watch trichomes: milky = potency peak; amber = more body. Harvesting too early costs weight; too late costs quality (THC degradation).

 

6) Indoor vs. outdoor—where is yield higher?

Outdoor vs. indoor yield: Outdoor often produces larger single-plant harvests but is weather- and site-dependent. Indoor delivers predictable consistency (typically 400–700 g/m²). Choose based on your goal (consistency vs. maximum weight).

 

How many grams per m² are realistic indoors?

  • Beginner: 200–450 g/m²
  • Intermediate: 500–700 g/m²
  • Pro setups (training + CO₂ + high-end LED): up to ~900 g/m²

 

Outdoors, we seldom measure in g/m² because plants grow freely. Under good conditions, 600–1,500 g per plant is possible.

 

Which cannabis strains have the highest yield?

Strong genetics are half the battle. Examples from the Linda Seeds catalog:

 

1) Critical 2.0 Feminized

Up to ~900 g/m² indoors or >1 kg outdoors. Dense, fast, reliable—great balance of mass & quality.

 

 

2) Gorilla Glue Auto

Autoflower with 40–200 g per plant (top cases ~300 g), robust performance, intense flavor, high potency.

 

3) Amnesia XXL

Sativa-leaning classic with explosive growth; 600–700 g/m² is achievable, more in top-tier setups.

 

 

4) Big Bud

Robust, easy to manage, a yield staple for years—even stays consistent under less-than-perfect conditions.

 

5) Wedding Cake & Auto Wedding Cake

Modern hybrids with strong potency (~25% THC), high yields, and dense buds—especially popular with indoor growers.

 

 

More options: high-yield feminized strains & high-yield autoflowers.

 

How can training or feeding increase yield?

  • Training: Topping + LST to create a flat, wide architecture (more tops in optimal light)
  • Feeding: Balanced NPK; boosters/stims can help, but never neglect pH/EC
  • Flushing: Final 7–10 days with plain water—improves aroma & smoke quality

 

Conclusion: More yield through know-how and the right strains

A high cannabis yield is rarely an accident—it comes from planning, discipline, and experience. When you understand which factors drive output and document consistently, you’ll see measurable gains. Invest in efficient LEDs, clean climate & nutrient management, and above all solid genetics. With high-yield autoflowers or high-yield feminized strains, you can achieve strong results even without a pro setup.


 

FAQ – Common questions about cannabis yield

How much does a cannabis plant yield?

Indoors, average values are 400–600 g/m² (depending on setup & experience); outdoors up to ~800 g per plant is possible. Autoflowers usually reach 40–200 g per plant.

How many grams per m² are realistic indoors?

With modern LEDs, stable climate, and precise nutrient management, 500–700 g/m² is realistic; top-tier setups achieve up to ~900 g/m².

Which factors influence cannabis yield the most?

Light density, temperature, humidity/airflow, genetics, pH/EC, pot size/medium, and training techniques.

How can I increase indoor yield?

Uniform PPFD, LST/SCROG/topping, clean pH/EC, managed airflow, optional CO₂ with strong LEDs.

Which cannabis strains have the highest yield?

Classics like Critical, Big Bud, Amnesia and modern hybrids (Wedding Cake, Gorilla Glue Auto). Overview: high-yield strains.

What’s a good yield per plant?

Autoflowers: 80–150 g is very achievable; photoperiod indoors: 300–600 g; outdoors, peak values over 1 kg per plant are possible.

How does outdoor yield differ from indoor?

Outdoor harvests can be larger per plant but are weather-dependent. Indoor provides predictable consistency and repeatable quality.


HowTo – Increase cannabis yield: step-by-step

Practical indoor guide optimized for more grams per m²—quick to implement.

 

Materials needed

  • LED grow light (≥2.3 μmol/J efficiency), or HPS ≥250 W
  • Exhaust with carbon filter & quiet circulation fans
  • pH/EC meter (calibrate regularly)
  • Substrate (soil/coco) + base nutrients; optional enzymes, silica, CalMag
  • SCROG net, soft plant ties (LST)

 

Tools

  • Sharp, sanitized pruning shears
  • Thermo/hygrometer (ideally with data logging)
  • Timer/controller for lights & exhaust

 

  1. Prep space & climate: 24–26 °C (75–79 °F) lights-on, 18–22 °C (64–72 °F) lights-off; RH 60–70% in veg, 40–50% in flower. Check tent/reflectivity.
  2. Genetics & pot strategy: Choose high-yield feminized hybrids or autoflowers; match pot volume and plant count to your target yield per m².
  3. Optimize light density: 600–900 μmol/m²/s PPFD in flower; ensure uniform coverage to the corners.
  4. Nutrient management: Start at 60–80% base feed; soil pH 6.0–7.0 / coco 5.5–6.2; raise EC moderately; check runoff.
  5. Plant training: Begin LST early, top 1–2× in veg; use SCROG to create a flat, high-light canopy.
  6. Watering & runoff: Water by pot weight; monitor 10–20% runoff (avoid salt buildup).
  7. Dial in flower: Weeks 3–6: maintain canopy uniformity & airflow; stack PK moderately, taper toward the end (aroma & mold prevention).
  8. Harvest & curing: Harvest at milky→amber trichomes; dry slow (18–20 °C / 64–68 °F, 50–55% RH), cure 2–4 weeks.