Indica, sativa & hybrid: strain differences explained

The most important thing: The classic indica/sativa classification is botanical, not pharmacological – and scientifically outdated. The effect depends on the terpene profile: myrcene = sedative, limonene = activating, linalool = anxiolytic.
At a glance:
  • Indica/sativa classification is botanical, not pharmacological – scientifically outdated
  • Effect depends on terpene profile: myrcene = sedative, limonene = activating, linalool = anxiolytic
  • Piomelli & Russo 2016: genetically no reliable separation between indica and sativa possible

Indica, sativa, hybrid: the classic classification

Few questions are asked as often by new cannabis users as: “What is the difference between indica and sativa?” The traditional answer is: Indica relaxes, makes you sleepy, body heavy (body high). Sativa makes you alert, creative, euphoric (head high). Hybrid is in between. This classification is widely used in dispensaries and pharmacies around the world – but is scientifically outdated.

Why the indica/sativa classification is outdated

The classification into Cannabis indica and Cannabis sativa is originally botanical (plant morphology), not pharmacological. Modern genetic analyses show:

Fischedick et al. 2010 (Phytochemistry): Genetic analysis of 157 cannabis varieties. Result: There is no consistent genetic separation between indica and sativa varieties. Many varieties marketed as “sativa” have indica genetics and vice versa.

Leafly Research 2015 (PLOS ONE): Customer preference data show: Effect varies more within indica/sativa categories than between them. The best predictor of effect is cannabinoid and terpene profiles, not strain name.

What really determines the effect: Terpene + THC:CBD ratio.

The actual impact determinants

terpene Concentration with effect Aroma
Myrcene Many indica varieties (>0.5 %) Sedative, muscle relaxant, increases THC uptake Earthy, musky, mango
Linalool Indica-dominant varieties Anxiolytic, sedative, antiepileptic Lavender, flowers
Lime Sativa-dominant varieties Mood-enhancing, anxiolytic, antidepressant Citrus
terpinolene Sativa varieties (Jack Herer etc.) Activating, clarifying, antioxidant Pine, flowers, herbs
beta-Caryophyllene Many hybrids Anti-inflammatory (CB2 agonist), analgesic Pepper, spicy
Pinene Sativa varieties Focus, memory enhancement (AChE inhibition), bronchodilation Pine, fresh

Variety recommendations according to indication

Instead of indica/sativa, the cannabinoid terpene profile is the better guide:

For sleep and relaxation:
– High myrcene content + THC >15 % + low CBD
– Typical strains: Granddaddy Purple, Northern Lights, OG Kush
– Terpene profile: myrcene-dominant, linalool

For creativity and focus:
– High limonene/terpinolene + THC 15-20 % + low myrcene
– Typical varieties: Jack Herer, Durban Poison, Green Crack
– Terpene profile: limonene, terpinolene, alpha-pinene

For pain and inflammation:
– High CBD:THC ratio (1:1 to 2:1) + beta-caryophyllene
– Typical strains: Harlequin, ACDC, Cannatonic
– Terpene profile: caryophyllene, myrcene

For fear without a high:
– CBD-dominant (CBD >10 %, THC <1 %) + linalool/limonene
– Typical varieties: Charlottes Web, Elektra, Suver Haze
– Terpene profile: linalool, limonene

Medicinal cannabis: varieties in Germany

Medicinal cannabis flowers available in German pharmacies are categorized by THC/CBD content and country of origin, not by indica/sativa. Brands such as Bediol (THC 6.3 %/CBD 8 %), Bedrocan (THC 22 %/CBD <1 %) and state-grown cannabis from Bannewitz are prescribed according to these ratios.

Study highlight: Piomelli & Russo 2016 (Cannabis Cannabinoid Res): Indica and sativa cannot be reliably distinguished genetically. Laboratory analyses show that products sold as indica often correspond to sativa terpene profiles and vice versa. The categorization is marketing.
More on the topic:

FAQ: Indica, sativa and hybrid

Summary

Indica, sativa and hybrid are outdated botanical categories with little pharmacological significance. What really determines the effect: Terpenes (myrcene = sedative, limonene = activating, beta-caryophyllene = anti-inflammatory) and THC:CBD ratio. For medical use: read the cannabinoid profile, check the terpene analysis of the product, test the effect individually. Cannabis terpenes in detail and CBD vs. THC difference for in-depth pharmacology.

Cannabis prescription online? Our teleclinic comparison shows all 31 providers in direct comparison – with prices, waiting times and real reviews. Free and independent.