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BackUK Unveils Plans to Stop Vapes Being Marketed to Children
UK Unveils Plans to Stop Vapes Being Marketed to Children
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BBC UK News1h agoPolitics2 min readUnited Kingdom

UK Unveils Plans to Stop Vapes Being Marketed to Children

Quick Look

  • The UK government has launched a 100-day consultation on new regulations to prevent the marketing of vapes to children.
  • Proposals include plain packaging, banning flavour names like confectionery and desserts, and moving vapes out of sight in shops, aiming to reduce youth experimentation with nicotine products.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

The UK government is consulting on new regulations to curb youth vaping, following the recent passing of the Tobacco and Vapes Act which aims to create a smoke-free generation and protect children from nicotine addiction.

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Plans to stop vapes being marketed to children have been unveiled as part of a UK-wide consultation to introduce plain packaging, stop the use of enticing flavour descriptions and move vapes out of sight in shops.

Health Secretary James Murray said it was clear too many young people were being lured into experimenting.

Under the proposals, packging would need to be bland, with limits on what imagery and branding could be used.

Names relating to confectionery, sweets, desserts and alcohol would be banned to make products less appealing to children.

There is no legitimate reason for nicotine products to come in neon packaging, feature cartoon images, or use flavours and branding designed to catch a child's eye, say health experts.

Murray said: "The evidence is clear: there are too many young people experimenting with vapes, attracted by the array of flavours, bright colours and marketing displays.

"We must act now to reduce the appeal of addictive vapes to our children.

"Vapes are less harmful than cigarettes and can play an important role in helping adult smokers to quit, but they should never be designed or marketed in ways that tempt children.

"These proposals are about striking the right balance and I urge everyone to have their say."

The 100 day consultation follows the recent passing of the Tobacco and Vapes Act, which sets out proposals to create the UK's first smoke-free generation, protecting children from nicotine addiction, while ensuring adult smokers can still access vaping products to help them quit.

Children aged 17 or younger now face a lifelong ban on buying cigarettes, since it will be illegal for shops to sell tobacco to anyone born after 1 January 2009.

And it gives the power to ban vaping in cars carrying children, in playgrounds and outside schools and at hospitals, expanding smoke-free laws.

It follows a ban on single-use vapes and comes ahead of future bans on the sale of vapes from vending machines and a planned end to the advertising and sponsorship of vapes.

Around one million or nearly one in every five 11-17 year olds in Great Britain reported trying vaping in 2025, according to the charity Action on Smoking and Health.

The consultation also proposes inserts for cigarette packs telling buyers where to get help to quit and plans to make all tobacco products – including cigarette rolling paper and cigars – come in plain packaging.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • New regulations on vape marketing, packaging, and sales will be implemented following the consultation.

    Very likely · Within months

Open Questions

  • What specific imagery and branding will be permitted?
  • How will enforcement of the new regulations be managed?
  • What is the anticipated impact on the vaping industry?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC UK News.

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