Vaping Laws: How Old Do You Need to Be to Vape
Vaping Laws: How Old Do You Need to Be to Vape
When it comes to vaping, all the states have their own age requirements. So how old do you have to be to buy a vape? According to Federal law, all fifty states have now imposed age restrictions on the purchase of e-cigarette products.
Table of contents
Table Of Contents
- What Is the Legal Age for Vaping
- What Is the Legal Age of Buying E-Cigarettes
- What Problems Does Vaping Cause?
- Research on How Safe Vaping Is
- Frequently Asked Questions
How Old Do You Have to Be to Vape
Along with age limits, several states have also instituted laws regarding the use, taxation, and sales of e-cigarettes:
- tax the sale of e-cigarettes, like with regular cigarettes: Minnesota, California, North Carolina, Louisiana, Kansas, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and the District of Columbia;
- prohibit the indoor use of e-cigarettes or in public areas, like bars and restaurants: Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, New Jersey, New York, Utah, Vermont, North Dakota, Oregon etc.;
- have banned e-cigarette sales through vending machines or self-service displays: New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Texas, Vermont, West Virginia, Wyoming, Iowa, etc.
How Old Do You Have to Be to Buy a Vape?
The exact age to legally purchase vapor products varies from state to state. Data compiled by the Public Health Law Center at Northeastern University provides a clearer picture of e-cigarette laws by state.
State | Age | vaping laws |
California | 21+ | in 2016 the state raised the age limit to purchase any “tobacco product”(covers both conventional cigarettes, as well as e-cigarettes) to 21. |
Hawaii | 21+ | sales, distribution of vaping devices are forbidden for an underage person. The same with the use. |
Oregon, New Jersey, and Maine | 21+ | have all followed suit by raising their age limits to 21. |
Alabama, Alaska, and Utah | 19+ | Anyone over the age of 19 can legally buy and possess a vaping device or accessory, like e-liquid. |
the rest 42 states | 18+ | 18 is the legal purchasing age in most other states. |
The change in tobacco purchasing laws in these states has also raised the legal age of vaping, given that e-cigarettes present a particularly vexing problem for lawmakers.
Public health officials, medical experts, and legislators are all of a different mind regarding the safety of e-cigarettes and even zero nicotine e-liquids. The lack of consensus on what e-cigarettes represent — an alternative to bad habits or public health disaster — has led to the uneven adoption of vaping laws.
While one side argues for the potential utility of e-cigarettes to help adult smokers, the other rails against the possibility of e-cigs addicting a new generation to nicotine.
Since chronic exposure to nicotine can have lasting effects on the brain, it stands to reason that young adults should avoid nicotine.
The gray area is whether the vaping age should only apply to nicotine-based vape juices and the aforementioned 0 nicotine ones should be allowed.
Even the imposition of age limits to buy e-cigarettes has divided many. Experts in the field have come out both for and against the age restrictions, further confounding what should (or should not) be done about e-cigarettes and what impact they have on society as a whole.
One thing is certain, if parents want their kids to not take up vaping, then parents that vape needs to stop or be more discreet about it. Kids will end up taking on their parents’ habits no matter what they are.
The Problem of E-Cigarettes
E-cigarettes were created for easier nicotine consumption and their use intended solely for adult smokers. But the technology has inadvertently drawn in an unexpected demographic.
According to the CDC, “e-cigarettes are the most commonly used tobacco product by American youth.”This trend has troubled many, given the addictiveness of nicotine and its potential to affect the development of the adolescent brain adversely.
Fears about teenage nicotine addiction have crystallized around one particular vaping device, the e-cigarette known as the Juul. The Juul is a portable, hand-held e-cigarette that vaporizes flavored e-liquid contained in “pods.”
For reasons as varied as its portability, attractiveness, and newness, the Juul has fast become a popular pastime among teenagers. Young people are “juuling” in school, at home, and on social media.
But, to the surprise of no one, many adolescent “juulers” are shockingly unaware of how much nicotine they are putting into their bodies. One Juul pod contains as much as 0.7 mL of liquid nicotine or the same amount as a pack of cigarettes.
Part of the issue is that young people take up vaping when they weren’t already smokers. Vaping for reasons other than a means to quit smoking can often lead people to take up cigarettes at a higher rate than people who didn’t start vaping first. This is especially true for teens.
Teenage ignorance about the health risks associated with vaping is why many parents, school officials, and medical experts feel the need to intervene.
They are lobbying state legislators to either increase the legal age to buy tobacco products (like the Juul) to twenty-one or enact even more stringent vaping regulations.
Pushing Back
The imposition of these age limits is just one part of a broader pushback against e-cigarettes in general. The FDA, which up until 2016 did not even regulate vaping devices, has done their best to make up for a lost time.
This past April, the FDA took action against 40 retailers for violations relating to sales of the Juul to minors. In addition to the citation of retailers in violation of the law, the FDA vowed to take a tougher overall stance regarding sales of e-cigarettes to minors.
The blitz targeted online retailers, as well as brick-and-mortar vape shops. The FDA’s actions were a response to the public outcry over the ubiquitous use of the Juul by young people.
But, despite the regulatory agency adopting a stricter, zero-tolerance stance toward e-cigarette sales to minors, groups like the American Lung Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Heart Association feel the FDA is not doing enough.
As a result, these and other public health groups are suing the FDA in federal court for allowing e-cigarette manufacturers like PAX Labs, makers of the Juul, more time to comply with upcoming regulations on e-cigarettes.
While FDA director Scott Gottlieb has not explicitly commented on the lawsuit, it puts him and his agency in an awkward position. In regulating e-cigarettes, the FDA must weigh the risks of teenage nicotine addiction, against the very real human toll cigarettes take every day.
Scientific Opinions
David Levy, a professor of oncology, pointed out how tried-and-true tobacco control policies, like higher cigarette taxes and age restrictions, “need to be supplemented with policies that encourage substituting e-cigarettes for the far more deadly cigarettes.”
Applying dated tobacco control policies, like raising the legal age limit to vapor products, may, in fact, be driving young people to regular cigarettes, one health economist found.
Dr. Michael Pesko, a researcher and assistant professor of public health policy at Weill Cornell Medical School, found an 11.7 percent increase in teen cigarette use in states where access to electronic nicotine delivery systems was restricted.
The findings of Dr. Pesko fly in the face of evidence uncovered by the director of the Center for Tobacco Research Control and Education at UCSF, Stanton Glantz.
Dr. Glantz’s research found teenage smoking stayed the same or was reduced in states where age restrictions were placed on the purchase of e-cigarettes.
Dr. Glantz is one of the most vocal advocates pushing for increasing the age limit to buy tobacco products to twenty-one. He was instrumental in getting the California legislature to change its tobacco-purchasing laws and he continues to lobby other states to do the same.