Can Non Compliant Vape Products Be Sold Legally

Can Non-Compliant Vape Products Be Sold in the UK? | Dispergo Vaping
Consumer guide • Vape law FAQs

Can Non-Compliant
Vape Products Be
Sold Legally?

The straight answer on whether a UK retailer can lawfully sell a vape without an MHRA notification. What Trading Standards looks for plus what happens to the retailer plus the product.

Updated: April 2026
Written by: Josh Douglas, Dispergo CEO
For: UK adult vapers & retailers (18+)
The short answer

No. Non-compliant vape products cannot be sold legally in the UK. Every vape device, pod or e-liquid on the UK market must be notified to the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) and must meet the Tobacco and Related Products Regulations 2016. That covers a 2ml tank limit, a 20mg per ml nicotine cap plus strict labelling. Selling non-compliant stock is a criminal offence carrying stock seizure, unlimited fines on conviction plus premises licence consequences under Trading Standards enforcement.

The figures behind enforcement

Three numbers that show
the rules have teeth

UK enforcement against non-compliant vape sales stepped up sharply in 2024 and 2025. Trading Standards seized record volumes of illegal stock alongside the run up to the June 2025 disposable ban.

4.9m

Illegal vapes seized

Combined total of illegal or non-compliant vape products seized by UK Trading Standards in 2023 and 2024.

Unlim.

Maximum fine on conviction

A Crown Court conviction for a TPD offence carries an unlimited fine. Magistrates can impose up to £10,000 per offence.

MHRA

Notification required

Every UK vape product must sit on the MHRA notified products list before it can be lawfully placed on the market.

The detailed answer

What “non-compliant” actually means plus why it is illegal.

The question most readers are really asking is not whether non-compliant vapes can be sold legally. They cannot. The question is which kinds of non-compliance are most common on the UK market plus how the enforcement system actually works when stock is found.

Compliance in the UK has a narrow legal definition. To be lawfully placed on the UK market a vape product must satisfy every one of the following:

  • Notified to the MHRA. The manufacturer must submit a Submission Portal notification at least six months before placing the product on the market.
  • Within the 2ml tank limit. No pre-filled or disposable pod may hold more than 2ml of e-liquid.
  • At or below 20mg per ml nicotine. The maximum nicotine strength allowed on the UK market is 20mg per ml.
  • Correctly labelled. Health warnings, nicotine content, ingredients list plus batch identifiers must all appear on packaging in the required format.
  • Not a single-use disposable. From 1 June 2025 single-use disposables are banned across the UK.

Miss any one of these and the product is non-compliant. Supplying it is an offence.

Who enforces the rules?

Two bodies share the enforcement job in the UK:

  • The MHRA manages the notification system. It can remove a product from the notified list, issue compliance notices plus publish enforcement alerts that effectively stop a product from being sold.
  • Trading Standards sits at local authority level. It carries out test purchases, inspects shops, seizes stock plus brings prosecutions. HMRC and Border Force support Trading Standards on imports.

What actually happens when a retailer gets caught?

The typical enforcement sequence on a first offence looks like this:

  • Inspection and sample purchase. A Trading Standards officer or a test buyer purchases or inspects stock.
  • Seizure. Non-compliant stock is removed under Section 9 of the Consumer Rights Act 2015 or powers under the TPD regulations.
  • Written warning or simple caution for a low-volume first offence where the retailer is cooperative.
  • Fixed penalty or summons for larger volumes or repeat offences. Cases go to Magistrates’ Court for sentencing.
  • Crown Court referral for the most serious cases including organised importation of non-compliant stock.
  • Premises licence review where the offence involves an alcohol premises. Licences can be suspended or revoked.

Repeat or large-scale offending can also trigger a Restricted Premises Order which prevents the retailer from selling tobacco or vape products for up to a year.

UK authority source check. The compliance framework above is set by the Tobacco and Related Products Regulations 2016, enforced by the MHRA plus local authority Trading Standards services. Enforcement figures are published by the Chartered Trading Standards Institute. The Environmental Protection (Single-use Vapes) (England) Regulations 2024 sit alongside these rules and ban single-use disposables from 1 June 2025.
How to check a product before you buy

Four checks that confirm
a vape is UK-legal

MHRA notification number

Printed on the outer packaging. Missing or obscured number means the product has not passed UK notification.

2ml tank printed on the device

“2000 puff” or “5000 puff” claims on a pod marketed as UK-legal are a clear indicator of non-compliance.

20mg per ml nicotine ceiling

Any claim above 20mg per ml for a UK retail product is a clear signal you are looking at an illegal device.

Registered UK retailer

Company number, VAT number plus a UK address on the contact page. Dispergo Vaping is registered at Unit 17 Stationfields, Kidlington, OX5 1JD.

Side by side

Compliant UK vape product vs
non-compliant stock

Both may appear professional at first glance. The differences show up on the outer packaging plus in the retailer’s business details.

Compliant UK product

Safe to buy

  • MHRA notification number printed clearly on the outer packaging.
  • 2ml tank capacity or less stated on the device and on the pod.
  • 20mg per ml nicotine or lower listed in the ingredients panel.
  • Health warning covering at least 30% of two pack faces.
  • Ingredients list plus batch number printed on the box.
  • Rechargeable plus refillable post-ban device format.
Non-compliant stock

Illegal to sell

  • No MHRA number anywhere on the packaging.
  • “Big puff” claims of 5,000, 7,000 or 10,000 puffs from a single pod.
  • Nicotine claims above 20mg per ml or no nicotine content stated.
  • Missing or incomplete health warning on the pack.
  • Single-use disposable format sold after 1 June 2025.
  • No UK business address or a PO Box only on the retailer’s contact page.

For the wider picture on how UK vape compliance actually works in practice, head to our full vaping FAQs hub. Every common question on the MHRA, TPD, the 2026 vape tax plus retailer compliance lives inside the one index.

Part of the hub

Back to the Vaping FAQs hub

This article is one chapter inside our complete FAQs knowledge base. Head back to the hub for the full index covering MHRA notification, TPD rules, the disposable ban plus retailer compliance.

Keep reading

More on UK vape compliance & enforcement

Compliance is a topic with several moving parts. If you want to understand what happens when the MHRA or Trading Standards pulls a product, our guide on what happens when a vape product is banned or recalled walks through the full process step by step. If you are trying to verify a product before you buy, the explainer on what it means if a vape product is MHRA compliant tells you exactly what to check on the pack. For the age of sale side of compliance, read the breakdown of penalties for selling vapes to underage customers.

Frequently asked

UK non-compliant vape questions

Can non-compliant vape products be sold legally in the UK?
No. Any vape product sold on the UK market must be notified to the MHRA and must meet the Tobacco and Related Products Regulations 2016 including the 2ml tank limit, 20mg nicotine strength cap and full labelling rules. Selling a non-compliant vape product is a criminal offence enforced by Trading Standards.
What counts as a non-compliant vape product?
A vape is non-compliant if it has no MHRA notification, if the tank is over 2ml, if the nicotine strength is above 20mg per ml, if the labelling is missing required health warnings or if it is a single-use disposable supplied after the 1 June 2025 ban.
What penalties do retailers face for selling non-compliant vapes?
Trading Standards can seize stock, issue unlimited fines on conviction, suspend or revoke premises licences plus refer cases for criminal prosecution. Individuals involved in the supply chain can face personal fines plus imprisonment in serious cases.
How can I check if a vape product is compliant?
Check that the product carries an MHRA notification number on the packaging. Check the stated tank capacity is 2ml or under and that the nicotine strength is 20mg per ml or lower. Buy from a UK-registered retailer that lists a company number and a physical business address. The MHRA publishes a public list of notified products.
What should I do if I find a non-compliant vape being sold?
Report it to your local Trading Standards service via Citizens Advice consumer helpline on 0808 223 1133. You can also report it directly to the MHRA yellow card scheme. Do not buy the product. Do not use a product that has already been bought if you cannot verify its MHRA notification.