Can Vaping Affect Hormones Over Time

Can Vaping Affect Hormones? UK Guide 2026 | Dispergo Vaping
Consumer guide • Prefilled pod systems

Vaping &
Hormones

Nicotine affects multiple hormone systems. Most research is on smokers. The mechanism is the same whether nicotine comes from cigarettes or vape. Here is the full picture plus why personalised GP advice matters for specific concerns.

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

Nicotine affects multiple hormones including cortisol, adrenaline, insulin plus sex hormones. Most published research has been on smokers but nicotine acts the same way whether delivered by smoking or vaping. Long-term vaping is a newer category so the direct evidence base is thinner than for smoking. Pregnancy, fertility planning, endocrine conditions plus specific hormonal concerns should all go to your GP for personalised advice. This page is general consumer information, not medical advice.

Three things to understand

What nicotine does
to your hormones

Three numbers that frame what research tells us, where the evidence gaps sit plus why personal medical advice matters for specific concerns.

Multiplehormones

Affected by nicotine

Cortisol, adrenaline, insulin plus sex hormones are all affected by regular nicotine use based on smoker research.

Smokerresearch

Main evidence base

Most published hormonal research is on smokers. The vape-specific evidence base is more limited because vaping is newer.

GPfirst

For hormonal concerns

Any specific hormonal health concern including fertility, menstrual cycle or endocrine condition should go to your GP first.

The detailed answer

Five hormone systems. Same mechanism as smoking. GP first.

Nicotine affects multiple hormones in the body. The effects are well documented in smoker research plus the underlying mechanism applies whether nicotine comes from smoking or vaping. Vaping is a newer category so the direct long-term evidence base is thinner than for smoking. Here is the current picture of what nicotine does to the main hormone systems, what that means for vapers plus why personal medical advice from your GP matters for any specific hormonal concern. This article is general consumer information, not medical advice.

This is not medical advice. If you have specific hormonal health concerns, fertility questions, pregnancy plans, menstrual cycle issues or any endocrine condition, speak to your GP for personalised advice. This article provides general consumer information only. It is not a substitute for medical consultation with a doctor who knows your specific situation.

How nicotine interacts with the hormone system

The endocrine system is the network of glands that produce hormones plus release them into the bloodstream. Hormones coordinate almost every function in the body including stress response, metabolism, reproduction plus sleep. Nicotine is a potent stimulant that binds to specific receptors in the brain plus nervous system. The binding triggers a cascade of hormone releases. Regular nicotine use can shift the baseline activity of some hormone systems over time.

Five hormone systems are affected most clearly based on published research on smokers:

1. Cortisol (the stress hormone)

Nicotine stimulates the release of cortisol from the adrenal glands. Cortisol is the body's main stress hormone. It raises blood glucose, mobilises energy reserves plus triggers the alertness response that users notice as part of the nicotine effect. Every nicotine hit drives a short-term cortisol spike.

Over longer periods regular nicotine use is associated with elevated baseline cortisol levels in some studies. Chronic cortisol elevation has been linked with various health issues including weight gain patterns, reduced sleep quality plus cardiovascular effects. Reducing nicotine strength or quitting entirely reduces the cortisol impact.

2. Adrenaline (fight-or-flight)

Alongside cortisol, nicotine triggers the release of adrenaline and noradrenaline. These are the acute stress hormones that drive the fight-or-flight response. They raise heart rate plus blood pressure. The effect is short-term and passes within minutes of the nicotine hit. Regular nicotine users notice this as the “rush” of the first vape of the day.

3. Insulin (glucose regulation)

Nicotine reduces insulin sensitivity over time. This is covered in detail in our separate piece on can vaping affect blood sugar levels. The short version is that long-term nicotine use makes the body less responsive to insulin which matters for diabetes risk plus management. Pre-diabetic or diabetic users should always discuss nicotine use with their GP or diabetes team.

4. Sex hormones (testosterone plus oestrogen)

This is where the evidence gets more nuanced. Research on smokers has shown nicotine can affect sex hormone levels in several ways:

  • Testosterone. Some studies on male smokers have shown reduced testosterone levels plus effects on sperm quality. The effect appears dose related.
  • Oestrogen. Research on female smokers has shown nicotine can affect oestrogen metabolism plus menstrual cycle regularity. Some evidence links smoking to earlier menopause.
  • Fertility. Both male and female fertility markers can be affected by nicotine use. This is one reason NHS pre-conception advice typically includes quitting smoking.

The direct vape-specific evidence base for these effects is more limited because vaping is a newer category. The underlying nicotine mechanism is the same which means the reasonable assumption is broadly similar effects at equivalent nicotine strengths. For anyone planning a pregnancy, experiencing fertility issues or with specific sex hormone concerns, a GP conversation is the right place to start.

5. Thyroid hormones

Some research has linked nicotine use to effects on thyroid function though the evidence is less consistent than for other hormone systems. Thyroid hormones regulate metabolism, energy plus many other processes. People with known thyroid conditions should discuss nicotine use with their GP or endocrinologist as part of ongoing care.

What switching from smoking changes

For a current smoker considering switching to vaping the nicotine-specific hormonal picture is similar. The nicotine acts the same way whether delivered by combustion or by heating. However, smoking adds significant additional hormonal effects through combustion by-products including cardiovascular effects, oxygen delivery changes plus direct toxicity to some endocrine tissues. Switching to vaping removes those combustion-specific effects while maintaining the nicotine effect.

Quitting nicotine entirely remains the cleanest hormonal outcome. NHS Stop Smoking services support both full quitting plus harm-reduction switching depending on personal goals.

Practical considerations for vapers

  • Strength matters. Lower nicotine strength means less nicotine absorbed per session plus smaller hormonal impact. Stepping down from 20mg toward lower strengths over time reduces cumulative effects.
  • Pregnancy is a special case. NHS guidance favours quitting nicotine entirely during pregnancy plus breastfeeding. Nicotine replacement therapy (patches, gum) is sometimes recommended if quitting cold turkey is not working.
  • Fertility planning. If you are trying to conceive or are being treated for fertility, discuss nicotine use with your GP or fertility team.
  • Existing endocrine conditions. Diabetes, thyroid conditions plus other hormonal disorders all benefit from clear communication with your GP about any nicotine use.

For anyone stepping down nicotine strength gradually, our nicotine salts collection covers every UK compliant strength from 20mg down to 3mg.

UK health source check. Information in this article references published research on smokers plus nicotine pharmacology as summarised in NHS plus Public Health England guidance. The vape-specific long-term evidence base is more limited than the smoking evidence base. This article is general consumer information not medical advice. For any specific hormonal health question speak to your GP.
Five hormone systems nicotine affects

What research on smokers
tells us about nicotine

Five hormone systems show effects from regular nicotine use based on published smoker research. Vape-specific long-term data is thinner but the mechanism is the same.

Cortisol

Main stress hormone. Short-term spike per nicotine hit. Elevated baseline associated with regular use.

Adrenaline

Fight-or-flight hormone. Raises heart rate and blood pressure short term. Part of the nicotine rush.

Insulin

Reduced sensitivity over time. Matters for diabetes risk. Covered in detail in our blood sugar guide.

Sex hormones

Testosterone and oestrogen both affected in smoker research. Fertility implications. GP advice for concerns.

Thyroid

Less consistent evidence but some studies show effects on thyroid function in regular nicotine users.

Four rules for hormonal health

What vapers with hormonal
concerns should know

Nicotine affects multiple hormones

Cortisol, adrenaline, insulin plus sex hormones all show effects from regular nicotine use based on smoker research.

Smoking research informs the picture

Most published evidence is on smokers. The nicotine mechanism is the same so the reasonable assumption is broadly similar effects at equivalent strengths.

Pregnancy is a special case

NHS guidance favours quitting nicotine entirely during pregnancy plus breastfeeding. Speak to your GP or midwife about personal options.

GP first for hormonal concerns

Fertility, endocrine conditions, thyroid issues, menstrual changes all benefit from personalised medical advice over general information.

For stepping down strength under GP guidance

Shop the nicotine salts range

Our nicotine salts collection covers every UK compliant strength from 20mg down to 3mg so you can step down at your own pace under GP guidance. Lower strengths reduce cumulative hormonal impact. Free next-day delivery on orders over £20.

Sensible habits vs risky habits

What supports hormonal
health during vaping

Certain habits reduce the cumulative hormonal impact of nicotine use. Others make it worse. Here is the direct side by side.

Sensible

Supports hormonal health

  • Speaking to your GP about nicotine use if you have any hormonal condition.
  • Stepping down strength over time reduces cumulative nicotine impact.
  • Full nicotine cessation during pregnancy per NHS guidance.
  • Fertility clinic disclosure of nicotine use as part of pre-conception planning.
  • Discussing thyroid medication plus nicotine with your endocrinologist.
  • Using NHS Stop Smoking services for personalised quit or step-down plans.
Risky

Hurts hormonal health

  • Starting vaping as a non-smoker introduces nicotine dependence without offsetting benefit.
  • Continuing high-strength use when cravings no longer require it.
  • Hiding nicotine use from your GP during hormonal investigations.
  • Assuming vaping is hormonally neutral because the mechanism is the same as smoking.
  • Vaping during pregnancy without GP guidance contrary to NHS advice.
  • Ignoring fertility team advice about nicotine while trying to conceive.

For the wider picture on vape and health interactions across conditions, our full health hub covers every major question UK readers ask.

Part of the hub

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.

Keep reading

More on vape & body systems

For the specific insulin and blood sugar dimension of the hormonal picture, our piece on can vaping affect blood sugar levels covers it in detail. For the broader view on vaping with any pre-existing condition, is vaping safe for people with existing health conditions walks through the general framework. And on the professional medical perspective, what doctors say about vaping as a smoking alternative covers the NHS position.

Frequently asked

Vape plus hormone questions

Can vaping affect hormones over time?
Nicotine affects multiple hormones including cortisol, adrenaline, insulin plus sex hormones. Most published research has been on smokers but nicotine acts the same way regardless of delivery method. Long-term vaping is a newer category with more limited direct research. If you have specific hormonal health concerns speak to your GP rather than relying on general information.
Does nicotine affect testosterone?
Some research on smokers has shown nicotine can suppress testosterone levels plus affect male fertility markers. The effect appears dose related and is one reason male smokers are often advised to quit before trying for a baby. Whether vaping has the same effect at equivalent nicotine strengths is less directly studied. Speak to your GP if fertility is a concern.
Can vaping affect menstrual cycles?
Some research on smokers has linked nicotine use to cycle irregularity plus earlier menopause. The vape-specific evidence base is more limited. If you notice changes in your menstrual cycle that concern you, speak to your GP. Pregnancy or trying to conceive is a specific situation where NHS guidance favours quitting nicotine entirely.
Does nicotine raise cortisol?
Yes. Nicotine stimulates the release of cortisol which is the body’s main stress hormone. The short-term effect is part of the alertness response users notice. Over longer periods elevated cortisol is associated with various health issues. Quitting nicotine entirely or stepping down strength reduces the cortisol impact.
Is vaping worse than smoking for hormonal health?
The nicotine-specific hormonal effects are broadly similar between smoking and vaping at equivalent strengths. Smoking adds significant other effects through combustion by-products that affect cardiovascular health, lung function plus some hormone systems. For a current smoker switching to vaping the hormonal picture is similar while wider health risks drop.
Should I tell my GP about vaping?
Yes especially for any hormonal investigation, endocrine condition, fertility planning or pregnancy. GPs need accurate information to interpret blood tests, plan treatment plus give personalised advice. Nicotine use is relevant to many hormonal investigations.