UK VAPE TAX 2026
Right then. HMRC has decided that 2026 wasn’t dramatic enough already — what with the disposable vape ban, a new Tobacco & Vapes Act, and the ongoing national trauma of finding your coils out of stock — and so they’ve gone and introduced a brand new vape tax. Coming 1 October 2026. Happy days.
Before you hurl your mod across the room: we’ve read through everything so you don’t have to. This is British Mist’s no-flannel guide to the UK Vape Tax 2026 — what it is, how much it’ll actually cost you, what’s not affected, and how to get ahead of it before October arrives.
Grab a brew. Let’s go.
What Exactly Is the Vaping Products Duty?
The Vaping Products Duty (VPD) is a new excise tax introduced by HMRC as part of the Tobacco and Vapes Act 2026, which became law on 29 April 2026. It applies a flat-rate charge of £2.20 per 10ml to all e-liquid sold through the UK’s legal supply chain — bottled nic salts, freebase, shortfills, nicotine shots, and the liquid inside prefilled pods. Even 0mg nicotine-free e-liquid. Yes, really.
Because VAT (at 20%) is then applied on top of the duty-inclusive price, the real-terms cost increase per 10ml works out to approximately £2.64.
The official government framing is that this is a public health measure to reduce the appeal of vaping to younger people. The unofficial framing — if you’re a bit cynical — is that the Treasury clocked five million adult vapers and thought “that’s a lot of people who aren’t paying a sin tax yet.”
Either way, it’s happening. And here’s what it means for you.
When Does It Start? Key Dates Explained
| Date | What Happens | What It Means for You |
|---|---|---|
| 1 Apr 2026 | Businesses can begin registering under the new duty scheme | Nothing changes for customers yet — retailers are getting their paperwork in order |
| 1 Oct 2026 | Vaping Products Duty begins. All e-liquid manufactured or imported from this date carries the £2.20/10ml charge. Duty stamps become mandatory on packaging. | New stock on shelves will start to cost more. Pre-October stock may still be available at old prices for a while (see grace period below). |
| 1 Apr 2027 | Grace period ends. All unstamped e-liquid is now illegal to sell. | From this date, everything on shelves carries the full duty. No more old-price stock. |
The grace period is the bit most people miss. Retailers — including British Mist — can continue selling stock manufactured before 1 October 2026 right up until 1 April 2027. So you may well be buying at current prices for several months after October, depending on stock levels. Which means now is the smartest time to load up on your favourites.
How Much Will My E-Liquid Actually Cost After October?
This is the big one. Let’s do the maths properly, because there’s a lot of loose scaremongering out there. The honest answer is: it depends what you buy and how much you use. Here’s a clear breakdown.
| Product | Typical Price Now | Price After Oct 2026 | Extra Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10ml Nic Salt e.g. your daily vape |
~£1.00–£2.50 | ~£3.64–£5.14 | +£2.64 |
| 2ml Prefilled Pod e.g. Lost Mary BM600 pod |
~£2.00–£3.50 | ~£2.53–£4.03 | +£0.53 |
| 50ml Shortfill e.g. weekend cloud-chasing |
~£8.00–£12.00 | ~£21.20–£25.20 | +£13.20 |
| 100ml Shortfill e.g. bulk buy |
~£14.00–£18.00 | ~£40.40–£44.40 | +£26.40 |
| 10ml Nicotine Shot to mix with shortfills |
~£1.00–£2.00 | ~£3.64–£4.64 | +£2.64* |
| *After-tax prices include £2.20/10ml duty + 20% VAT. Prices shown are estimates based on current average UK retail prices. *Nicotine shots: HMRC guidance suggests these may be exempt — confirm with HMRC before October 2026. Hardware (devices, coils, pods, tanks) is NOT affected by VPD. | |||
The uncomfortable truth about shortfills: the duty is charged by liquid volume, not nicotine content or risk level. So the most sustainable, least youth-appealing format — a 100ml shortfill bought by an adult ex-smoker trying to save money — faces the steepest hike of all. A 100ml bottle could top £40 after October. That’s not a typo. We’re as baffled by the logic as you are.
If you’re a 10ml nic salt user, the hit is real but manageable — roughly £2.64 extra per bottle. Most daily vapers use 1–2 bottles a week, so we’re talking £137–£274 extra per year. Not nothing. But keep reading.
📊 E-Liquid Price Impact — Before vs After October 2026 Tax
Estimates based on £2.20/10ml duty + 20% VAT applied to average UK retail prices, June 2026. Hardware not affected.
What Products Are Affected — And What Isn’t?
| Product | Taxed by VPD? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 10ml Nic Salt e-liquid | YES ✗ | Full £2.20/10ml applies |
| Freebase / standard e-liquid | YES ✗ | Full £2.20/10ml applies |
| Shortfill e-liquid (50ml, 100ml) | YES ✗ | Taxed per 10ml of volume — hardest hit |
| Prefilled pods (liquid inside) | YES ✗ | Liquid content is taxed; pod hardware isn’t |
| 0mg / nicotine-free e-liquid | YES ✗ | Taxed on liquid volume, not nicotine content |
| Nicotine shots | LIKELY ✗ | Probably taxed — HMRC to confirm before October |
| Vape devices / mod kits | NO ✓ | Hardware is exempt — standard 20% VAT only |
| Replacement coils | NO ✓ | Exempt — standard VAT only |
| Empty refillable pods | NO ✓ | Exempt when sold without liquid |
| Batteries, tanks, accessories | NO ✓ | All hardware is exempt |
The silver lining, if you squint hard enough: your actual vape kit, coils, pods, tanks, and accessories are completely untouched by VPD. Only the liquid is taxed. So if your device is knackered and you were thinking about upgrading — the window between now and October is actually a brilliant time, because kit prices won’t change.
Will Vaping Still Be Cheaper Than Smoking After the Tax?
Yes. And it’s not even close — yet. Let’s put some actual numbers on it.
| Habit | 🚬 Smoking (pack a day) | 💨 Vaping — Before Oct ’26 | 💨 Vaping — After Oct ’26 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual spend (est.) | £4,500–£5,500 | £400–£700 | £600–£1,050 |
| Monthly spend | £375–£458 | £33–£58 | £50–£88 |
| Annual saving vs smoking | — | ~£3,800–£5,000 | ~£3,450–£4,900 |
The gap narrows. It does not close. A pack-a-day smoker in the UK is spending somewhere between £4,500 and £5,500 a year on cigarettes in 2026 — and tobacco duty rises every year too, so that number only goes upward. Even a heavy shortfill vaper paying the full new tax will still spend a fraction of that. Vaping after the tax is still roughly 70–85% cheaper than smoking.
If the vape tax tempts you back to cigarettes: please don’t. We’re not just saying that because we sell vapes. We’re saying it because the maths — and the NHS — are firmly on the side of staying off the fags.
From 1 October 2026, HMRC will add £2.20 per 10ml to all e-liquid sold in the UK, including nicotine-free liquid. After VAT, this represents an increase of approximately £2.64 per 10ml. The duty applies to liquid volume only — vape hardware, coils, pods, and tanks are not affected. Even after the tax, vaping remains significantly cheaper than smoking.
What British Mist Customers Should Do Right Now
You’ve got time. October is the deadline, and there’s a grace period running until April 2027 on pre-tax stock. But stock will shift fast once people clock what’s coming — so here’s our honest advice:
🛒 Stock Up on E-Liquid Now
Particularly shortfills and your daily nic salts. Pre-tax stock bought today locks in today’s prices. Store e-liquid in a cool, dark spot and it’ll keep well for 1–2 years.
⭐ Use Your Reward Points
British Mist reward points on e-liquids are worth more before October than after. Rack up points now and redeem them when the tax kicks in to soften the blow.
🔋 Upgrade Your Kit Before October
Hardware isn’t taxed — so if your device is creaking, now’s the ideal time to upgrade to something more efficient. A better kit uses less liquid and saves you money in the long run.
📦 Consider Switching Format
Shortfill users will feel the most pain. If you’re on a 50ml shortfill habit, it might be worth exploring 10ml nic salts in a good MTL pod kit — less liquid consumed, more efficient nicotine delivery.
As always, British Mist offers free same-day local delivery across BCP on orders over £20, and free UK-wide delivery on orders over £24. Same-day dispatch before 4pm. So if you’re reading this and thinking “right, I’ll grab a decent stash before October” — you’re in the right place.
And if you’re a Blue Light Card holder (NHS, military, emergency services) — don’t forget your 10% discount applies on top. Email bluelight@britishmist.co.uk to claim it.
Frequently Asked Questions — UK Vape Tax 2026
Does the UK vape tax apply to nic salts?
Yes. The Vaping Products Duty applies to all e-liquid sold in the UK, including nicotine salt (nic salt) e-liquids. The duty is charged at a flat rate of £2.20 per 10ml, regardless of nicotine strength. A 10ml bottle of 20mg nic salt pays the same duty as a 10ml bottle of 3mg freebase or even 0mg nicotine-free e-liquid. After VAT, expect to pay around £2.64 more per 10ml bottle from October 2026.
Is vape hardware — my device, coils, pods — taxed?
No. Vaping hardware is completely exempt from the Vaping Products Duty. That includes vape kits, mod devices, replacement coils, empty refillable pods, tanks, batteries, and accessories. These products will continue to be subject only to standard 20% VAT, which hasn’t changed. Only the e-liquid itself is taxed under VPD.
When do vape prices actually go up?
The Vaping Products Duty officially begins on 1 October 2026, when all new e-liquid manufactured or imported into the UK from that date must carry the duty and a new HMRC duty stamp on the packaging. However, there is a grace period running until 1 April 2027, during which retailers can continue to sell existing unstamped stock (made before October) at pre-tax prices. How long that stock lasts varies by retailer. After 1 April 2027, all e-liquid on UK shelves must carry the duty stamp, and no pre-tax stock can legally be sold.
Can I buy tax-free vapes from abroad to beat the duty?
You can bring a small amount of vaping products into the UK for personal use duty-free — HMRC will confirm the exact allowance before October 2026. However, for anything above the personal allowance, you’d be required to pay duty on import. Buying in bulk from overseas sellers to avoid UK duty would constitute tax evasion, which carries serious penalties. The bigger practical issue: from April 2027, any e-liquid without a UK duty stamp becomes illegal to sell — so overseas products without stamps won’t be legally usable in the UK supply chain.
Does the tax apply to nicotine-free / 0mg e-liquid?
Yes. The Vaping Products Duty is calculated on liquid volume, not nicotine content. A 10ml bottle of 0mg nicotine-free e-liquid is taxed at exactly the same rate as a 10ml bottle of 20mg nic salt — £2.20 in duty, plus VAT. This is one of the more controversial aspects of the legislation, as it taxes products that contain no addictive substance whatsoever.
Will vaping become as expensive as smoking after October?
No. The gap narrows, but it does not close. A pack-a-day cigarette habit costs approximately £4,500–£5,500 per year in the UK in 2026. Even after the new vape duty, a typical vaper will spend £600–£1,050 per year — still roughly 75–85% less than smoking. The NHS and UK health bodies continue to recommend vaping as a significantly less harmful alternative to smoking for adult smokers who switch completely.
Are shortfills or nic salts better value after the tax?
It depends on your vaping style. The duty is charged per 10ml of liquid volume regardless of format, so the raw duty cost is the same per ml. However, shortfill users tend to vape more volume (higher VG, higher wattage, more clouds), which means more liquid consumed and therefore more duty paid overall. MTL vapers using 10ml nic salts in an efficient pod kit typically consume far less liquid to achieve the same nicotine satisfaction — making them significantly better value after the tax. If you’re currently a shortfill vaper, it may be worth exploring a good MTL pod kit and nic salts before October.
Article published by British Mist, Poole, Dorset. Last updated June 2026. Information based on HMRC guidance and the Tobacco and Vapes Act 2026 as of publication date. Prices are estimates based on average UK retail figures and are subject to change. We’ll update this article as HMRC confirms final details on nicotine shots and duty allowances before October 2026.




