US Vape Industry Report: Enforcement Escalation, “Made in America” Rebranding, and a Cooling Trade Market
Federal seizures hit a record $86.5 million. Chinese manufacturers pivot to American branding to evade tariffs. Trade show sentiment signals the weakest market mood in three years. Here is what operators, buyers, and brand managers need to know this week.
“Made in America” Vapes Are Flooding US Shelves — Most Lack FDA Authorization
The most consequential development in US vaping this week is not a product launch or a flavor trend — it is a branding pivot engineered in response to the Trump administration’s escalating trade tariffs and federal crackdown on unlicensed imports.
According to a Reuters investigation published April 7, at least eight new vape brands have emerged on US retail shelves since October 2025, each prominently displaying American credentials — flags, “Made in USA” stamps, and domestic-sounding names. None of the eight brands identified by Reuters holds FDA marketing authorization for sale in the United States.
Industry analyst commentary sourced by Reuters frames the shift as a consumer-facing response: the Trump administration has repeatedly told US consumers that Chinese-made products are dangerous, and vape manufacturers are adapting their packaging accordingly. One industry consultant who works with Chinese firms, speaking under condition of anonymity, described the strategy as straightforward market repositioning.
BAT CEO Tadeu Marroco addressed the trend directly, stating that as federal enforcement increases, competitors “get more creative.” Some of BAT’s own products currently lack FDA licences. Chinese trade data shows no reduction in US-bound vape shipments from China, with 2025 export value exceeding $4 billion.
Not all “Made in America” positioning is disingenuous. Small US-based manufacturer Charlie’s Holdings Inc opened its first domestic factory in December 2025 to fill one of its disposable vape brands with US-made e-liquid, citing supply chain disruption associated with finished-device imports and documented consumer preference for domestic production.
HHS and CBP Execute Largest Illegal E-Cigarette Seizure in US History: $86.5 Million
Federal enforcement reached an unprecedented scale this month. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), acting in coordination with US Customs and Border Protection (CBP), executed a seizure of illegal e-cigarette products valued at $86.5 million — the largest single operation of its kind recorded by US authorities.
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and former Attorney General Pam Bondi appeared at a major seizure announcement, framing the operation in explicit geopolitical terms — characterizing China as profiting from the deliberate export of “dangerous” illegal vape products into the US market.
The political framing reinforces a dual-purpose enforcement narrative: illegal vapes are simultaneously a public health concern and a component of the broader US-China trade dispute. Operators and distributors should anticipate intensified retail inspections in the coming months as the FDA expands its enforcement discretion posture.
TPE 2026: Vape Section Records Weakest Sentiment in Three Years as Cautious Mood Dominates
The Tobacco Plus Expo (TPE) 2026, which concluded earlier this month, delivered a markedly subdued atmosphere across its vape segment — providing one of the clearest real-time signals yet of where the US market stands heading into Q2 2026.
According to exclusive reporting by 2Firsts, exhibitors and distributors consistently described cautious buying behavior, limited new product launches, and a failure to convert distributor conversations into confirmed orders. The show’s first floor — occupied by cigar and accessory exhibitors — maintained stable traffic, while the second floor, dominated by vape brands, drew noticeably fewer attendees. Several participants noted that visitors left the exhibition after walking the first floor without continuing upstairs.
Three structural factors were cited repeatedly by participants as explanations for subdued sentiment:
- Inventory overhang: Excess stock accumulated through 2025 has suppressed new ordering appetite among distributors.
- FDA enforcement anxiety: Ongoing uncertainty around which products will face enforcement action has made buyers cautious about committing to large positions.
- Nicotine pouch competition: Several distributors flagged that nicotine pouches are actively pulling consumers away from disposable vapes on a value-per-use basis. A disposable vape retails at approximately $15–$20 for roughly one week of use; a can of nicotine pouches delivers comparable duration at a fraction of the price.
FDA Slows Nicotine Pouch Fast-Track Approvals; VTA Reports State-Level Legislative Win
The FDA’s expedited review pathway for nicotine pouches has decelerated significantly, according to reporting by Tobacco Insider. Regulators have indicated that youth use rates and addiction potential are factors causing the agency to exercise greater scrutiny before issuing marketing authorizations — a departure from the faster pace that manufacturers had anticipated when the pathway was introduced.
The FDA’s messaging is consistent: broader population health outcomes and youth access prevention take precedence over processing speed. The agency has separately launched a new web-based premarket application submission system intended to improve long-term throughput.
On the legislative front, the Vapor Technology Association (VTA) reported a meaningful win in its April newsletter, noting a successful outcome in at least one state legislature fight over flavored vape restrictions. The VTA cautioned, however, that the broader regulatory battle remains active and that the industry should not interpret any single legislative success as a turning point.
Flavor Ban Enforcement Spreads: Denver, Vermont, and New York Advance Simultaneous Restrictions
State-level regulatory action against flavored vapes is progressing on three major fronts simultaneously, creating compounding headwinds for flavored product categories across multiple US markets.
- Denver, Colorado: Enforcement of the city’s flavored tobacco sales ban commenced in January 2026, following a November 2025 citywide referendum in which approximately 70% of voters reaffirmed the City Council’s original legislation. The Denver Department of Public Health and Environment is contacting all 575 affected retailers to coordinate compliance. City inspectors are overseeing product removal from shelves.
- Vermont: The state legislature passed Senate Bill S.18, which would prohibit the sale of flavored e-liquid and tobacco substitutes effective January 1, 2026. The Governor is currently weighing whether to sign the legislation, with state revenue impact cited as a key consideration. A Vermont Department of Health survey found that approximately 90% of the state’s vapers use flavored products.
- New York: Governor Kathy Hochul has proposed a second state vape tax, a first-ever nicotine pouch tax, and the creation of a statewide vaping registry — a comprehensive regulatory package that, if enacted, would significantly increase compliance burden for distributors operating in the state.
Taken together, these developments represent the broadest simultaneous state-level policy push against flavored vapes since the federal flavor ban discussions of 2021–2022. Retail operators with multi-state distribution networks should conduct immediate inventory and compliance reviews for flavored SKUs in all three jurisdictions.

