Can Secondhand Marijuana Smoke Make You Test Positive?

In real-world conditions, secondhand marijuana smoke is very unlikely to cause a positive drug test — but “very unlikely” isn’t quite the same as “impossible,” and the specifics matter.

What the research actually shows

Studies on secondhand exposure have found that under typical, well-ventilated conditions, THC levels absorbed from secondhand smoke are far too low to trigger a standard urine drug test’s detection threshold. The scenarios where a positive result becomes plausible are extreme: an unventilated, small space with heavy, prolonged smoke exposure over hours.

Why this happens at all

Trace amounts of THC can be absorbed through inhalation of secondhand smoke, but standard drug tests are calibrated with cutoff levels specifically designed to distinguish between passive exposure and active use — this is intentional, to avoid exactly this kind of false accusation.

Hair and blood tests

The same general principle applies to hair and blood testing, though hair tests have historically raised more debate about environmental contamination versus ingestion. Most testing labs use methods designed to differentiate.

Practical takeaway

If you’re concerned about an upcoming test, avoiding enclosed spaces with active cannabis smoke is a reasonable precaution, even though the actual risk from brief or well-ventilated exposure is low. This is a different question from how long weed stays in your system after your own use, which involves much higher THC levels.

FAQ

Can secondhand smoke get you high?

Only in extreme, confined exposure scenarios similar to those that could theoretically affect a drug test — casual secondhand exposure doesn’t produce a noticeable high.

Should I be worried about my job if I’m around someone who smokes weed?

For typical social exposure, the evidence suggests minimal risk of a false positive, though avoiding prolonged exposure in unventilated spaces is a reasonable precaution if drug testing is a genuine concern.

Written by the CHS SOS Team · Last updated: July 2026

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