What Happens If You Are Caught Vaping Under Eighteen UK

What Happens If Caught Vaping Under 18 in the UK? | Dispergo Vaping
UK law guide • Vape Legal

What Happens If Caught
Vaping Under 18 in the UK?

Four things typically follow. Confiscation of the vape. School disciplinary response plus parental notification. Trading Standards investigation into where it came from. Retailer fines up to £2,500 if a UK seller is traced. The under-18 themselves does not commit a criminal offence.

Updated: April 2026
Written by: Josh Douglas, Dispergo CEO
For: UK parents, teens plus educators
The short answer

Four things typically happen when an under-18 is caught vaping in the UK. One. The vape is confiscated. By school staff, parents, Trading Standards officers in some councils or other authority figures. Two. School disciplinary response. UK schools treat under-18 vaping as a behavioural plus safeguarding matter. Standard responses include detention, exclusion, parental notification plus pastoral referral. Three. Trading Standards may investigate. To identify the UK retailer or adult who supplied the vape. The investigation focuses on the seller not the young person. Four. Retailer plus proxy buyer face fines. UK retailers selling to under-18s face fines up to £2,500 per offence. Adults making proxy purchases face the same maximum fine. The under-18 themselves does not commit a criminal offence. No UK criminal record results from an under-18 using a vape. The legal framework targets the adults who sell or supply. This is the critical legal distinction.

The UK enforcement numbers

Three numbers behind
UK under-18 vape enforcement

Retailer fine, proxy fine plus target of the law.

£2500max

Retailer fine

Maximum per-offence fine for a UK retailer selling a vape to an under-18. Applies to shop owners plus staff.

£2500max

Proxy buyer fine

Maximum fine for an adult buying vapes for an under-18. Same amount as retailer offence. Includes parents.

£0teen

Under-18 fine

No criminal fine for the under-18 themselves. UK law targets sellers plus proxy buyers. Consequences are school plus confiscation-based.

The detailed answer

UK consequences for under-18 vaping in five parts

UK law deals with under-18 vaping through multiple routes. Retailer enforcement. Proxy purchase enforcement. Trading Standards powers. School discipline. Safeguarding. Five parts cover what actually happens after an incident.

Part 1: what happens to the under-18

Under-18s themselves face specific consequences but not criminal ones:

  • Vape confiscated. By school staff, parents or Trading Standards officers depending on where the incident occurred.
  • No UK criminal offence. Using a vape under 18 is not a criminal offence for the young person. No criminal record results.
  • No UK fine to the under-18. The legal framework does not fine the young person.
  • Parental notification. School or Trading Standards will typically inform parents of the incident.
  • Possible safeguarding referral. If the school or council has wider concerns about the child’s welfare.
  • GP plus NHS stop smoking referral. If the under-18 appears dependent on nicotine, a GP may be involved to offer age-appropriate support.

Part 2: what happens at school or college

UK schools apply their own disciplinary policies:

  • Confiscation on sight. Standard across UK secondary schools, sixth forms plus colleges.
  • Detention. Common first response for a single vaping incident on school premises.
  • Parental notification. Phone call, email or letter home on the same day.
  • Temporary exclusion. For repeat incidents or high-severity cases (supplying to other students, vaping in lessons).
  • Pastoral or safeguarding referral. Routine in UK schools to check for wider welfare concerns.
  • Permanent exclusion. Rare but possible for repeat serious incidents.
  • School behaviour plus safeguarding policies. Available to parents on request. Every UK school has its own version.

Part 3: what happens to the retailer

UK retailers caught selling to under-18s face significant consequences:

  • Fine up to £2,500 per offence. Under the Nicotine Inhaling Products Regulations 2015.
  • Individual staff liability. The cashier who made the sale can be personally fined alongside the shop owner.
  • Repeat offence escalation. Multiple offences can trigger licence review by the UK council.
  • Licence revocation. UK councils can strip a retailer’s premises licence for repeat serious offences.
  • Trading Standards investigation record. Held against the business for future enforcement decisions.
  • Media coverage. Prosecuted UK retailers often feature in local press under Trading Standards public-interest reporting.
  • Challenge 25 prevents this. UK retailers applying Challenge 25 rigorously virtually eliminate the risk. Dispergo Vaping applies it at every till.

Part 4: what happens to a proxy buyer

Adults who buy vapes for under-18s face the same UK enforcement:

  • Proxy purchase offence. Buying a vape for anyone under 18 is a specific UK offence under the 2015 Regulations.
  • Fine up to £2,500. Same maximum as the retailer offence.
  • Includes parents. UK law does not exempt family members. A parent buying a vape for their own 16 year old is committing a proxy purchase offence.
  • Includes older siblings, friends plus strangers. The relationship is irrelevant in UK law.
  • Trading Standards may investigate. If the proxy purchase is discovered plus traced.
  • No criminal record for a first offence fine. But the financial penalty can be substantial.

Part 5: the role of UK Trading Standards

Trading Standards carries UK enforcement powers:

  • Test-purchase operations. Using 16 or 17 year old volunteers to check UK retailer compliance.
  • Public place confiscation. Some UK councils authorise officers to seize vapes from under-18s in public.
  • Investigation of seized products. To identify the UK retailer or adult source.
  • Retailer prosecution. Taking cases through the UK magistrates’ court Single Justice Procedure.
  • Education plus engagement. Working with schools plus councils to raise awareness.
  • Not a UK-wide confiscation power. Depends on council policy. London councils plus several metropolitan councils apply it. Rural councils vary.
  • Reporting suspected sales. Parents or teachers can report at tradingstandards.uk or via local UK council websites.
UK authority source check. Enforcement powers described here are based on the Nicotine Inhaling Products (Age of Sale and Proxy Purchasing) Regulations 2015, the Children and Families Act 2014 plus the standard UK Trading Standards enforcement framework. Fine amounts reflect the current UK maximum standard penalty. Individual UK council confiscation powers vary: consult your local council website for the current policy. Dispergo Vaping applies Challenge 25 at every point of sale plus refuses all sales to under-18s as a matter of UK licensed retailer compliance.
Four outcomes

Four outcomes after a UK
under-18 vape incident

Vape confiscated

By school, parent or Trading Standards. Standard first step. The device is retained as evidence.

School disciplinary action

Confiscation, detention, exclusion plus parental notification. UK schools apply their own policies.

Trading Standards investigation

Into where the vape came from. Focus on the retailer or proxy buyer not the under-18.

Retailer or proxy fined

Up to £2,500 per offence. Falls on the UK adult seller or proxy buyer, not the under-18.

Compliant vs non-compliant UK retailer

Compliant UK retailer vs
retailer caught selling to under-18s

The same UK law plays out very differently for Challenge-25 compliant retailers versus those who skip checks. Selling to an under-18 is genuinely a serious offence with real consequences.

Challenge 25 compliant retailer

Clean UK record

  • Challenge 25 applied at every till. No under-25 left unchecked.
  • Staff trained on age verification. Every UK employee.
  • Refusal log maintained. Evidence of compliance.
  • Passes Trading Standards test purchases. Refuses 16 year old test buyers.
  • Clean record with UK council. No licence concerns.
  • Trusted UK licensed retailer. Like Dispergo Vaping.
Retailer caught selling to under-18

Serious UK consequences

  • Fine up to £2,500 per offence. Per sale.
  • Individual staff prosecution. The cashier can be fined too.
  • Trading Standards record. Held against the business.
  • Licence review or revocation. UK council action for repeat offences.
  • Local press coverage. Public-interest reporting.
  • Customer trust damaged. Long-term business impact.

Under-18 vape enforcement sits alongside the broader UK vape age framework. For the full picture visit our vape legal hub. Every major UK vape legal question sits inside.

Part of the hub

Back to the Legal hub

This article sits inside our UK vape legal knowledge base. Head back to the hub for the full index covering age of sale, indoor vaping, underage penalties, illegal products plus wider UK regulation.

Keep reading

More UK vape age guidance

UK under-18 enforcement sits inside the wider vape age framework. Our piece on how old do you have to be to vape covers the full 18+ legal basis plus retailer obligations. Our guide on is it legal to vape at 16 in the UK answers the specific age query for teens plus parents. Our buyer-focused piece on what age can you vape in the UK covers where adults can legally buy.

Frequently asked

UK under-18 vape enforcement questions

What happens if you are caught vaping under 18 in the UK?
Four things can happen when an under-18 is caught vaping in the UK. The vape is usually confiscated (by school, parent or Trading Standards). Schools typically notify parents plus apply their own disciplinary policy (detention, exclusion, pastoral referral). Trading Standards may investigate where the vape came from. The under-18 themselves does not commit a criminal offence under UK law but the adult who sold or supplied the vape does and faces fines up to £2,500.
Can an under-18 be prosecuted for vaping in the UK?
No. Using a vape under 18 is not a criminal offence for the young person under UK law. The legal framework targets the adult seller plus anyone making a proxy purchase. Under-18s face consequences through other routes: school disciplinary policy, confiscation by Trading Standards in some UK council areas, parental notification plus safeguarding referrals. No UK criminal record results from an under-18 using a vape.
What happens to a UK retailer caught selling vapes to under-18s?
Fines up to £2,500 per offence under UK law. Shop owners plus individual staff can both be prosecuted. Repeat offences can lead to the retailer’s licence being revoked by the UK council. Trading Standards runs test-purchase operations using 16 plus 17 year old volunteers to check compliance. Media coverage is common for prosecuted UK retailers. Licensed UK retailers like Dispergo Vaping apply Challenge 25 specifically to avoid this risk.
Do UK schools call the police if a student is caught vaping?
Usually not. School vaping is a disciplinary matter not a criminal one. Standard UK school responses include confiscation, parental notification, detention, temporary exclusion or pastoral referral. Police may be involved only if related concerns exist (sale to other students or theft or if the vape contains non-nicotine substances like THC which is a separate illegal matter in the UK). For a standard school vape incident no UK police action is typical.
Can Trading Standards confiscate a vape from a 16 year old in the UK?
In some UK council areas yes. Several UK councils have authorised Trading Standards officers to seize vapes from under-18s found in public places. The vape is then retained as evidence while the council investigates where it was purchased. The under-18 is not fined or prosecuted. The investigation focuses on the retailer or adult who supplied the vape. This is not a UK-wide power and depends on the council’s local enforcement policy.