Why Nicotine Strength Is Capped At 20mg In The UK
Why UK Nicotine
Is Capped at
20mg/ml
The UK cap on vape nicotine strength sits at 20mg/ml. Set by the TPD in 2014. Carried into UK law in 2016. Still the benchmark in 2026. Here is the full reasoning behind the cap plus why it remains in place despite periodic calls to move it in either direction.
The UK cap at 20mg/ml comes from the 2014 EU Tobacco Products Directive (TPD) which was transposed into UK law as the Tobacco and Related Products Regulations 2016. It sits at the balance point between harm reduction for adult smokers switching to vaping plus limiting acute toxicity and dependence risk. Before the cap, freebase e-liquids at 24mg/ml were common. The cap lowered the ceiling but nic salts introduced after 2016 deliver the same satisfaction at 20mg/ml through faster absorption plus smoother throat feel. The cap is not expected to be raised. The Tobacco and Vapes Bill keeps the 20mg/ml limit unchanged.
Three numbers that
anchor the UK cap
The historic ceiling, the current cap plus the typical smoker benchmark. Together they show why 20mg/ml landed where it did.
Pre-cap freebase ceiling
The typical pre-TPD freebase strength that the 2014 regulations moved below to reduce peak nicotine exposure.
Current UK cap
The strength ceiling that applies to every nicotine-containing vape product sold in the UK since 2016.
Nicotine per cigarette
Typical inhalable yield from a single smoked cigarette. The satisfaction benchmark for the 20mg/ml vape cap.
The 20mg/ml cap sits at a public health balance point
The UK cap at 20mg/ml is not arbitrary. It is the output of a specific balancing exercise the EU ran through 2012 and 2013 ahead of the 2014 TPD. The question was where to set a ceiling high enough to help adult smokers switch plus low enough to limit acute toxicity and dependence risk. The answer was 20mg/ml. The cap has held unchanged ever since. Here is the reasoning behind each part of the calculation.
The benchmark: satisfying a former smoker
The starting point for any cap has to be what adult smokers need to switch successfully. A cigarette delivers around 1mg of nicotine to the bloodstream per stick. A pack-a-day smoker absorbs around 20mg of nicotine over a day. Freebase e-liquids at 24mg/ml typically delivered 2ml to 4ml of liquid per day. That produced a daily nicotine absorption roughly matching the cigarette pattern.
The regulators concluded that a cap at or slightly below the old freebase ceiling could preserve cessation utility. 20mg/ml was picked as the round number just under 24mg/ml that still met the majority of smokers.
The acute toxicity concern
Higher strengths carry acute toxicity risks that lower strengths do not. A 30ml bottle of 36mg/ml freebase e-liquid contained over a gram of pure nicotine. Accidental ingestion by a child at that concentration could be fatal. The TPD 20mg/ml cap plus the 10ml retail bottle rule limit the total nicotine in any one pack to around 200mg which is well below the acute toxicity threshold for a child.
The dependence risk concern
Very high nicotine strength vape products can produce higher blood nicotine levels than smoking. This was a concern in the 2013 risk assessment because:
- Rapid repeated dosing creates cycles of withdrawal plus reinforcement that are harder to break than smoking.
- Non-smokers starting on high nicotine become dependent faster than they would on lower strength.
- Youth dependence risk is higher for any nicotine exposure but particularly so at higher strengths.
Capping at 20mg/ml reduces but does not eliminate these risks. It was judged a proportionate middle ground.
Why nic salts did not change the cap
Nic salts launched commercially in the UK around 2017. They deliver nicotine through a different chemistry than freebase. Key differences:
- Lower pH. Nic salt e-liquids sit closer to neutral pH which makes them smoother in the throat at high strength.
- Faster blood absorption. Nic salt nicotine reaches the bloodstream quickly which satisfies cravings faster than freebase.
- Effective satisfaction at lower strengths. 20mg/ml nic salt feels similar to 24mg/ml freebase in user satisfaction.
Importantly nic salts did not create a case for raising the cap. The existing 20mg/ml ceiling became more effective because the nic salt format extracted more perceived satisfaction from the same ceiling.
Why the cap is unlikely to change
Three forces keep the cap where it is:
- The Tobacco and Vapes Bill does not change it. The 2024-2025 policy package focuses on flavours, packaging, sale age plus tax. Strength is left alone.
- Industry is not pushing for a rise. Nic salts deliver effectively at 20mg/ml. Most producers see no need for a higher cap.
- Public health bodies do not want a lower cap. Reducing the cap could undermine cessation success among heavy smokers switching from tobacco.
Four common profiles on the
20mg/ml UK strength ladder
Heavy smoker switching
Twenty-plus cigarettes a day. Start at 20mg/ml nic salt in a pod kit. Step down once settled.
Moderate smoker switching
Ten to twenty cigarettes a day. 10mg/ml nic salt is typically plenty. Move up to 20mg/ml only if cravings persist.
Sub-ohm shortfill user
High vapour cloud plus lower nicotine. 3mg/ml once diluted matches the higher airflow format comfortably.
Step-down toward zero
Established vaper reducing over time. Common path: 20mg → 10mg → 6mg → 3mg → 0mg over months or years.
UK approach vs overseas
nicotine strength regimes
Not every country applies the same cap. Here is how the UK 20mg/ml framework compares with other major English-speaking markets.
20mg/ml cap
- ✓Strength cap at 20mg/ml. Applies to every format.
- ✓10ml bottle size limit on pre-mixed nicotine liquid.
- ✓2ml tank size limit on devices.
- ✓MHRA notification system for every SKU.
- ✓Public health body support. Cap is seen as appropriate.
- ✓Nic salt widely available within the cap.
Different caps or none
- ✗US pre-2020. No federal cap. 50mg/ml nic salts common.
- ✗Canada post-2021. 20mg/ml cap aligned with UK approach.
- ✗Australia. Prescription-only nicotine vaping regime. Different approach entirely.
- ✗New Zealand. 50mg/ml cap for closed systems, 20mg/ml for open.
- ✗Singapore. Total ban on nicotine vaping.
- ✗Japan. Nicotine vape e-liquid banned. Heated tobacco dominates.
The nicotine cap sits inside the wider UK TPD framework. For the full context visit our vaping FAQs hub. Every major UK vape regulation question sits inside.
Back to the Vaping FAQs hub
This article sits inside our complete FAQs knowledge base. Head back to the hub for the full index covering MHRA rules, TPD, the 2025 disposable ban, the 2026 vape tax plus retailer compliance.
More on UK nicotine & TPD rules
The 20mg/ml cap is only one piece of the UK TPD framework. Our full breakdown on how TPD rules affect vape devices and e-liquids sets out every limit that applies alongside strength. The underlying public health logic that connects the cap to wider policy is covered in how UK vape laws balance harm reduction and public health. For the labelling rules that sit alongside the strength rule our working checklist is in what labelling and packaging rules apply to vapes.

