Who My28Grams Appears To Be
My28Grams is a cannabis delivery service name that shows up when people search around for weed online, and from publicly available information it appears tied primarily to the Calgary area in Alberta rather than to Ontario. If you came across the name and were not sure what it was, the short version is that it presents as a delivery focused cannabis service rather than a walk in storefront, with a footprint that looks centred out west.
We are writing this as a neutral overview for readers who simply want a fair sense of what the service is. We are not affiliated with it, and we are not trying to talk anyone into or out of using it. Our aim is to describe it fairly based on what is publicly visible and to be honest about the things we cannot independently confirm from the outside.
Because we operate in Toronto and the GTA, our perspective here is that of an outside observer, and an especially cautious one given that the service appears based in a different province. We have kept everything general wherever we could not verify specifics. GasDank is independent and is not affiliated with the business reviewed here, and details change over time, so verify everything directly with the store before you rely on it.
Why Location Matters Here
The first and most important practical point about My28Grams is location, because it shapes whether the service is even relevant to you. Public information points to the Calgary area as its base, which means readers in Toronto and the GTA should not assume it serves them at all. Before anything else, the sensible step is to confirm directly whether a given service actually reaches your address.
This matters more than the menu, the pricing, or anything else, because a service you cannot order from is simply not an option no matter how appealing it looks. Cannabis delivery services often define their service areas tightly, and those areas can change over time, so checking is not optional if you want to avoid wasting your time on something that does not apply to where you live.
We are flagging this prominently and early on purpose, because it is the single fact that decides whether any of the rest is relevant to you. A fair review has to be honest about the basics, and the basic reality is that a service apparently centred in Alberta may well not be available to a reader in Ontario at all. Confirm that one point before you give the rest of it a second thought, since everything else only matters if the service can actually reach your door.
The Delivery Focused Model
My28Grams presents as a delivery focused service rather than a traditional storefront, which is a common and perfectly normal way to operate in cannabis. A delivery model trades the in person browsing experience for the convenience of having an order brought to you, which suits shoppers who would rather not travel and are comfortable choosing from a menu without handling products first.
The strengths of a delivery model are convenience and speed, at least within whatever area a service actually covers. The trade off is that you rely more heavily on clear menu descriptions and good communication, since you cannot see or smell anything before it arrives. That makes the quality of a service's information and customer support especially important for this kind of model.
None of this is unusual. Delivery focused cannabis services are widespread across many cities, and the model works well when it is run carefully and communicated clearly. Whether any specific service executes it well is something its own local customers are far better placed to judge than we are from the outside, which is exactly why independent reviews from the actual service area are worth more here than a distant overview like this one.
The Kind Of Products It Is Associated With
Based on what is publicly visible, My28Grams is associated with a broad cannabis range rather than a narrow specialty. That typically covers dried flower across indica, sativa, and hybrid options, edibles, vapes, extracts, and accessories, which together make up the sort of full menu many general delivery services aim to offer the customers in their area.
A broad menu is genuinely useful if you like having choices in one place, since you can compare a few flower options, pick up an edible, and grab an accessory in a single order. The trade off, as with any menu anywhere, is that specific items move in and out of stock, so what is available on a given day will not always match what you saw before.
We are deliberately not quoting particular brands, prices, or potency numbers, because those details change constantly and we would much rather you get them straight from the source than rely on a figure that may already be out of date by the time you read it. That caution is for your benefit as much as the service's, and it applies doubly when the service is based elsewhere and harder for an outside reader to keep track of. When you do find the official menu, look at how fresh and well maintained the listings appear, since an actively updated menu is a small but real sign that a service is paying attention to its own storefront.
General Reputation Themes
Speaking broadly and fairly, a delivery focused service like My28Grams is generally positioned around convenience, speed, and a full product range for customers within its area. That is a reasonable, mainstream position for a cannabis delivery service to take, and it describes the goals of many such services operating in various cities.
We want to be careful rather than overstate anything. We are not going to invent star ratings, customer counts, or specific praise we cannot stand behind, especially for a service we have no direct experience with and that operates outside our region. What we can fairly say is that the public profile reads as a standard, convenience oriented delivery service, which is exactly what a lot of shoppers in any city are looking for.
If reputation matters to you, the most useful step is to read a range of recent, independent reviews from its actual service area and weigh them as a group. One or two reviews rarely tell the whole story, while a larger, recent sample gives a fairer and more reliable picture of any service.
How Ordering Tends To Work
For a delivery focused cannabis service, ordering usually follows a familiar pattern worth understanding. You browse a menu, choose items, and place an order, with age verification required at some point because no legal cannabis service can skip it. Payment methods, minimums, delivery windows, and service areas then vary by service and are exactly the things worth confirming directly.
Where services differ most is in the details around delivery, since that is the whole point of the model. How fast they deliver, how they define their area, what they accept as payment, and any minimum order all shape whether a service is practical for you. These details can change, so the official channels are the place to confirm them rather than assuming based on a general description.
We are describing the general pattern rather than stating My28Grams's specific terms, because those can change and because we would rather you read the current ones directly than rely on a version that might be out of date by the time you order.
Service And Communication
With a delivery model, communication carries more weight than it does in a storefront, because it is your main link to the service. Good communication can steer a newer customer away from something far too strong, suggest a sensible starting point, and clear up questions about formats like flower, edibles, and extracts before anything is delivered. That kind of help matters a great deal when you cannot inspect products in person.
We cannot personally speak to how My28Grams communicates, and we are not going to invent praise or criticism about a service we have not dealt with. What we would say is that, for any delivery service you are considering, the way questions are handled is a fair and telling thing to watch. A patient, clear answer is a good sign, while a vague or pushy one is worth noting.
If you do order and you are unsure about something, just ask before you commit. Reputable services are used to questions, and the better ones prefer to help you choose well rather than simply move product, which is reassuring when you are buying sight unseen.
Honesty And Verifying For Yourself
We think the only fair way to review a service we do not run is to stick to what can be reasonably established and to be upfront about the limits of an outside view, especially one looking across provinces. We have avoided inventing addresses, phone numbers, exact prices, ratings, founding dates, or any negative claims, because making things up would not help you and would not be fair to the service.
GasDank is independent and is not affiliated with the business reviewed here, and details change over time, so verify everything directly with the store before you rely on it.
If you want hard details, go straight to the source. Confirm the service area first of all, then read a fair spread of recent independent reviews from that area, and check current products and pricing directly before you count on them. That habit serves you well with any cannabis service, and it matters even more when the service appears to be based outside your own region.
What This Means For Toronto And GTA Readers
For readers here in Toronto and the GTA, the honest bottom line is that a service apparently centred in the Calgary area may simply not be available to you, and that has to be confirmed before anything else is worth considering. We are not going to pretend a far away service is a practical local option when the public information suggests otherwise, because that would not be fair or useful to you.
If it turns out My28Grams does not serve your area, that is not a knock against the service itself. It just means it is not the right fit for where you happen to live, the same way a perfectly good local shop in another city would not be. The practical question is always availability, and availability is geographic before it is anything else.
So if you are in Toronto or the GTA, treat this piece mainly as context and a method for checking, and put your real energy into confirming whether the service reaches you at all before you weigh anything else about it. If it does not, there is no need to dwell on its menu or its pricing, since neither matters when the service cannot deliver to where you live in the first place.
How GasDank Serves Toronto And The GTA
If you are in Toronto or the GTA and you were really looking for somewhere that delivers locally, GasDank is our own same day delivery service and online dispensary covering exactly that area. We carry a broad menu across flower, edibles, concentrates, vapes, and more, and we bring orders directly to your door rather than asking you to look toward a service based in another province.
Our terms are simple, and we will only state what is true. GasDank delivers same day across Toronto and the GTA, with a $40 minimum order, free delivery on orders over $80, payment accepted by cash or Interac e-Transfer, and a 19 or older age requirement in line with Ontario law. Those are the actual conditions you would be ordering under, laid out plainly.
We are not connected to My28Grams in any way and do not speak for it. We mention our own service only because the most common reason someone reads a review like this is to find somewhere that actually delivers to them, and for Toronto and GTA readers, a local option is the practical answer.
Knowing The Rules By Province
Cannabis rules in Canada vary by province, covering the legal age, the retail and delivery model, and how licensing works. A service that operates normally in Alberta does so under Alberta's framework, which can differ from Ontario's in ways that matter to a customer, so it is worth knowing which rules actually apply to you before you order anything.
For readers here, Ontario's framework is the relevant one, including the 19 or older age requirement. We are not going to summarize Alberta's regulations in detail, both because they change and because current official guidance is more reliable than a secondhand version. The general point is simply to know which province's rules govern your own purchase.
What stays constant everywhere is the value of buying from a properly licensed service in the relevant jurisdiction. Confirming authorization is a sensible first step no matter how convenient a service seems, and the official provincial sources are the place to check that.
Tips Before You Order Anywhere
If you are considering My28Grams or any delivery service, a few habits make things smoother. Confirm the service area and current terms before you rely on them, since these change with little notice and a delivery service that does not reach you is no use at all. Have valid government issued photo identification ready, because age verification is required and cannot be skipped by any legal service.
Have a rough idea of what you want before you order, even if you stay open to suggestions. Knowing whether you are after flower, an edible, or something else makes the process quicker and helps staff point you somewhere useful. If you are newer to cannabis, say so, and a good service will adjust its advice rather than assume you know everything on the menu.
And do not feel rushed. A reputable service gives you time to ask questions and decide. If you ever feel pressured into a purchase you are unsure about, that is a fair reason to slow down or look elsewhere instead, particularly when you are buying without seeing anything first.
Being Sensible With A First Order
When you try any cannabis service for the first time, including one you found while searching around, it is sensible to start with a modest order rather than a large or complicated one. A smaller first order lets you see how the whole process works, from communication to fulfilment, without much riding on it if something does not go smoothly the first time around.
Treat that first experience as your real source of information, more reliable than any review, ours included. Was the communication clear? Did the order match what you expected? Were the terms what you were told? Those practical answers tell you more about whether a service is worth using again than any amount of reading could.
If the first order goes well, you can order with more confidence next time. If it does not, you have lost very little and learned something worth knowing. Starting small is simply the prudent way to approach any service that is new to you, and it matters even more when you are ordering for delivery rather than buying in person.
Reading Reviews Wisely
Since this is a review of sorts, a quick word on reading reviews in general, this one included. No single review should be the only thing you rely on. The most reliable picture comes from reading several recent, independent reviews together, ideally from the service's actual area, and looking for patterns rather than fixating on any one strongly worded opinion at either extreme.
Pay attention to how recent the reviews are, too. A cannabis service can change a lot over time as staff and stock shift, so a glowing or harsh review from a few years back may not reflect the service as it is today. Recent feedback, taken as a group, is usually far more useful than older comments when you are deciding whether to order.
And remember your own experience is the real test. Reviews are a helpful starting point for setting expectations, but the only way to truly know whether a service suits you is to try it for yourself, sensibly and with an open mind, assuming it serves your area in the first place.
The Bottom Line On My28Grams
My28Grams comes across as a standard, convenience focused cannabis delivery service that publicly appears tied to the Calgary area, offering the kind of broad product range many shoppers want from a delivery service. We have kept this overview general and fair, avoided inventing specifics, and pointed you toward official sources for anything precise you need.
For readers in its actual service area, it looks like a reasonable option worth checking out for yourself, using recent independent reviews and the official channels to fill in the details. For readers in Toronto and the GTA, the first question is simply whether it serves you at all, and if it does not, a local delivery service like GasDank is the practical route.
Either way, the smart habits stay the same. Confirm the service area and current details directly, read a fair spread of reviews rather than one or two, and choose the option that genuinely fits where you live and how you like to buy your cannabis.





