Can Vaping Make You Sick
Vape &
Feeling Sick
Yes vape can make you feel sick. Most commonly nicotine sickness from too much too quickly. Five main causes cover nearly every case. Here is the full picture plus when to call 111 or 999.
Yes vaping can cause nausea, dizziness, headache and vomiting. The most common form is nicotine sickness from too much nicotine too quickly. Five main causes cover almost every case: nicotine overdose, empty stomach, dehydration, chain vaping plus component sensitivity. Most cases resolve within 1-2 hours of stopping vaping plus hydrating. Stop at the first sign of nausea, sit down, drink water, eat a simple snack if able. Call NHS 111 for persistent or worsening symptoms. Call 999 for severe symptoms including seizure, loss of consciousness or severe breathing difficulty.
Main causes plus
escalation thresholds
Three numbers that summarise the typical causes, the normal resolution window plus the point at which medical attention is needed.
Of vape-related sickness
Nicotine overdose, empty stomach, dehydration, chain vaping plus PG/VG sensitivity cover the vast majority of cases.
Typical resolution
Most nicotine sickness resolves within this window once vaping stops and hydration plus food are restored.
Escalation thresholds
Call 111 for persistent or worsening symptoms. Call 999 for severe symptoms including seizure, collapse or severe breathing problems.
Five main causes. Most resolve in 1-2 hours. Know escalation thresholds.
Yes vaping can make you sick. The most common form is nicotine sickness which produces nausea, dizziness, headache plus sometimes vomiting. Five main causes account for almost all vape-related sickness cases: too much nicotine too quickly, empty stomach use, dehydration, chain vaping plus sensitivity to specific components. Most cases resolve with a break from vaping plus basic hydration within one to two hours. Severe or persistent symptoms warrant NHS 111 or GP review. This article is general consumer information, not medical advice.
The main forms of vape sickness
1. Nicotine sickness. The most common form. Classic symptoms are nausea, dizziness, headache, sweating, pale skin plus sometimes vomiting. It follows absorption of too much nicotine too quickly. Three typical triggers: a new vaper using higher strength than their tolerance handles, an experienced vaper chain vaping or someone accidentally using stronger liquid than intended. Symptoms usually peak within 30-60 minutes of overdose and resolve within 1-2 hours of stopping.
2. Empty stomach nausea. Nicotine stimulates stomach acid production. On an empty stomach there is no food to buffer the acid which produces nausea, upper-stomach discomfort plus sometimes vomiting. Our stomach pain guide covers this mechanism in detail. Eating something before vape sessions typically resolves this specific cause.
3. Dehydration symptoms. Regular vaping contributes to mild dehydration which itself can cause headaches, dizziness plus nausea particularly in users who do not drink enough water. Symptoms often appear in the afternoon after morning vape sessions.
4. Chain vaping effects. Continuous vape use without breaks maintains high nicotine levels in the blood plus produces cumulative effects. Some users experience a slow-building nausea through the day from chain vaping that would not happen with spaced sessions.
5. PG/VG or flavouring sensitivity. A small percentage of users have sensitivity to propylene glycol, vegetable glycerine or specific flavour compounds that can produce nausea, headache or general feeling unwell. Switching to different liquids often identifies the trigger.
Nicotine sickness in detail
Nicotine sickness has a recognisable pattern worth understanding. Six signs typically appear together:
- Nausea as the first sign for most people.
- Dizziness or lightheadedness sometimes with a sensation of the room swimming.
- Headache often dull rather than sharp.
- Sweating plus pale or clammy skin.
- Rapid heartbeat or awareness of the heart beating hard.
- Possible vomiting in more severe cases.
The pattern is similar to motion sickness or the first cigarette after a long gap for smokers. Most cases are mild plus resolve quickly. Severe cases can include confusion, muscle weakness or breathing difficulty and need medical attention.
First aid for nicotine sickness:
- Stop vaping immediately.
- Sit or lie down in a safe place.
- Drink water slowly.
- Eat a small simple snack if able to (plain toast, banana).
- Avoid strong smells or bright light.
- Rest for 1-2 hours.
If symptoms do not improve within 1-2 hours or are worsening, call NHS 111. For severe symptoms including seizure, loss of consciousness or severe breathing difficulty call 999 immediately.
The new vaper adjustment
New vapers experience sickness more often than experienced users for three reasons. First, their nicotine tolerance is low especially if coming from no smoking history. Second, they are still learning to pace sessions. Third, they may be using strengths too high for their tolerance.
The standard advice for new vapers:
- Start at a nicotine strength that matches your existing tolerance. 20mg nic salt is suitable for 15-20+ a day smokers. Lighter smokers may need 10mg or 5mg.
- Space sessions out through the day rather than chain vaping.
- Stop at the first sign of nausea. This is the signal that you have had enough.
- Give yourself 2-4 weeks to find your natural use pattern.
Accidental ingestion is different
Feeling sick from vaping is different from toxic reaction to swallowing e-liquid. Any significant ingestion of e-liquid is a toxicology emergency. A 10ml bottle of 20mg nic salt contains 200mg of total nicotine which is well above the toxic dose for adults plus potentially lethal for children or pets.
- For adults. Call NHS 111 for advice. Severe symptoms (vomiting, dizziness, confusion, seizure) need 999.
- For children. Call 999 immediately.
- For pets. Contact a vet immediately.
- Keep the bottle to show medical staff.
Prevention: store e-liquid in a locked or high cupboard. The child-resistant caps required by UK law reduce risk but are not childproof.
When to see a GP
Book a GP appointment for:
- Sickness that persists for more than a day.
- Sickness that recurs every time you vape.
- Symptoms that are severe enough to affect daily life.
- Any new symptom alongside general vape use.
- Unexplained vomiting or weight loss.
Mention vape use as context. Sickness has many possible causes and the GP needs the full picture.
Practical prevention for vapers
- Eat before vape sessions to buffer stomach acid stimulation.
- Hydrate throughout the day.
- Space vape sessions rather than chain vaping.
- Match strength to your tolerance. Lower strength for new vapers or lighter smokers.
- Listen to early warning signs. Mild nausea means stop, not continue.
- Store e-liquid securely away from children and pets.
If you are stepping down strength as a precaution, our nicotine salts collection covers every UK compliant strength from 20mg down to 3mg.
What actually produces
the different symptoms
Five distinct causes account for almost all vape-related sickness cases. Each has its own pattern plus its own fix.
Nicotine overdose
Too much too quickly. Produces the classic nicotine sickness pattern of nausea, dizziness plus sweating.
Empty stomach
Stomach acid stimulation without food to buffer. Resolves quickly once you eat something.
Dehydration
Contributes to headaches, dizziness plus general nausea. Water throughout the day addresses it.
Chain vaping
Continuous high nicotine levels produce cumulative effects. Spacing sessions resolves this.
Component sensitivity
PG, VG or flavour compounds can cause nausea in sensitive users. Switching identifies the trigger.
What vapers should
know to stay safe
Stop at the first sign of nausea
The body is signalling enough. Continuing vape use worsens nicotine overdose. Break, hydrate, rest.
Eat before vape sessions
Empty stomach vape is a common cause of nausea. Small snack 30 minutes before usually resolves it.
Hydration prevents most causes
Dehydration amplifies nearly every other cause of vape sickness. Water throughout the day is the simplest protection.
999 for severe, 111 for persistent
Seizure, loss of consciousness or severe breathing difficulty need 999. Persistent or worsening less severe symptoms need 111.
Shop the nicotine salts range
Our nicotine salts collection covers every UK compliant strength from 20mg down to 3mg. Lower strengths reduce nicotine overdose risk. Free next-day delivery on orders over £20.
What prevents sickness
vs what causes it
Most vape-related sickness is preventable with straightforward habits. Here is the direct side by side of patterns that protect versus patterns that cause problems.
Good habits
- ✓Eating before vape sessions buffers stomach acid stimulation.
- ✓Spacing sessions through the day prevents cumulative nicotine effects.
- ✓Starting at a strength matching your tolerance avoids new-vaper overdose.
- ✓Stopping at first sign of nausea prevents full nicotine sickness.
- ✓Hydrating throughout the day addresses multiple causes.
- ✓Calling 111 for persistent symptoms rather than waiting it out.
Risky habits
- ✗Chain vaping despite mild nausea worsens nicotine overdose.
- ✗Using maximum strength as a new vaper common cause of sickness.
- ✗Vaping on an empty stomach at high strength worst combination.
- ✗Running chronically dehydrated amplifies every other cause.
- ✗Ignoring persistent sickness rather than seeking medical advice.
- ✗Leaving e-liquid accessible to children or pets toxicology risk.
For the wider view on vape and body systems across nausea, digestion plus general health, our full health hub covers every major question UK readers ask.
Back to the Prefilled Pod Systems guide
This article is one chapter inside our complete Prefilled Pod Systems knowledge base. Head back to the hub for the full index covering refilling, safety, longevity plus regulation.
More on vape & sickness
For the specific nausea experience many new vapers report, our piece on why does vaping make me feel sick walks through the main causes plus fixes. For the specific stomach pain dimension, can vaping cause stomach pain covers digestive effects in detail. And for the more serious question of nicotine toxicity, can you overdose on nicotine covers that topic.

