Washington, D.C. – The Consumer Choice Center has released its second US State Vaping Index, which looks at 50 states plus the District of Columbia. It reveals that only 3 states, including Alaska, North Dakota, and Tennessee, received an A+ in the study for an evidence-based approach to vaping policy.
This rating means these states are in a position to harness the enormous potential of vaping as a harm-reduction tool while still letting consumers choose for themselves. Other states that perform well are Arizona, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Texas, Alabama, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Wisconsin.
By contrast, 12 states have overwhelmingly embraced restrictive policies on vapers and vaping, including Utah (0 points), California (second to last at 5 points), Vermont (10 points), Oregon, New York, New Jersey, Nebraska, Massachusetts, Illinois, Hawaii, D.C., and Colorado (all at 15 points). The number of low scores has doubled since the 2020 edition of the Vaping Index.
Emil Panzaru, Research Director for the Consumer Choice Center, commented on the implications of the Index, saying,
“Vaping saves lives. If every smoker in the United States switched to vaping over ten years, you’d have 6.6 million fewer premature deaths in the US. Unfortunately, policymakers across America do not recognize that vaping is a valid harm-reduction substitute for traditional combustible tobacco products. Vapes are often mistakenly referred to as tobacco products, and in turn, targeted with draconian flavor bans, taxed higher than cigarettes, subject to registries meant to gatekeep the products, and faced with bans on online sales. These policies deter consumers from switching away from the more dangerous habit of smoking and fuel black markets for vape products. The end result is a patchwork of state laws at odds with the most up-to-date public health practices from around the world.”
The purpose of the US Vaping Index is to inform consumers about vaping policies in their area and highlight the need for more informed and level-headed lawmaking. The Consumer Choice Center weighed five factors in the Index:
1) Whether the state considers vapes to be tobacco products 2) State-level vaping flavor restrictions 3) Requirements for state registries (which mirror the FDA-approved database) 4) Additional excise taxes on vaping 5) The presence or absence of online sales bans.
Panzaru added, “Let’s set the empirical record straight. The best available research by authorities such as Public Health England recognizes that vaping is 95% safer than combustible tobacco for users. Evidence in the New England Journal of Medicine finds that vaping is twice as effective at smoking cessation than any nicotine tablet, patch, or spray at helping people quit smoking. What’s more, a review of fifteen different studies found little evidence of a supposed gateway effect leading teens down the path from vaping to smoking or hard substances.”
“Rather than embracing policies that ignore the evidence and do not work, state authorities should commit to studying and learning from the example of Sweden, the first country to become smoke-free in Europe thanks to the research-driven recognition of vapes as harm-reduction tools,” Panzaru concluded.
Best performing states
State | Total score | Final Mark |
Alaska | 50 | A+ |
North Dakota | 50 | A+ |
Tennessee | 50 | A+ |
Arizona | 45 | A |
Michigan | 45 | A |
Mississippi | 45 | A |
Missouri | 45 | A |
Montana | 45 | A |
Texas | 45 | A |
Alabama | 40 | A |
Arkansas | 40 | A |
Oklahoma | 40 | A |
Wisconsin | 40 | A |
Worst performing states
State | Total score | Final Mark |
Colorado | 15 | F |
D.C. | 15 | F |
Hawaii | 15 | F |
Illinois | 15 | F |
Massachusetts | 15 | F |
Nebraska | 15 | F |
New Jersey | 15 | F |
New York | 15 | F |
Oregon | 15 | F |
Vermont | 10 | F |
California | 5 | F |
Utah | 0 | F |
*** The entire Index can be found HERE ***
*** The report’s author, Emil Panzaru, is available to speak on consumer regulations and consumer choice issues. Please send media inquiries to US Media Director, Stephen Kent: stephen@consumerchoicecenter.