UK Search Interest in Disposable Vapes Has Collapsed Since the Ban, New Analysis Shows

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UK search demand for disposable vapes has fallen by close to 60% since 2023, according to a new analysis by Discount Vape Pen, an online vaping store that specialises in refillable 510-thread cartridge batteries, with the steepest part of the decline landing after the government’s single-use vape ban took effect.

The company’s analysis of UK search volume for “disposable vape” found that monthly search demand averaged around 36,400 across 2023, before falling to an average of roughly 15,000 a month across the first half of 2026, a drop of almost 59%. The decline is not a single event. It tracks a longer shift away from single-use hardware that hardened into law on 1 June 2025, when the sale and supply of disposable vapes was banned across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, as confirmed by GOV.UK.

A Ban Built on Waste, Not Just Nicotine

The government’s stated case for the ban leaned heavily on the environmental cost of single-use devices. Nearly five million disposable vapes were being littered or thrown away every week in 2024, and their lithium batteries present a fire risk in general waste and recycling streams alike. Retailers were required to clear existing stock and arrange proper recycling once the ban came into force.

The public health case ran alongside it. Figures published around the ban showed the proportion of vapers in Great Britain mainly using single-use devices falling from 30% in 2024 to 24% in 2025, with the drop sharper still among 18 to 24 year olds, down from 52% to 40% over the same period, according to Action on Smoking and Health (ASH).

What the Market Did Next

Retail data gathered in the weeks after the ban shows the shift was not just theoretical. Convenience stores lost more than 5 million pounds in vape sales in the first week alone, weekly revenue falling from around 23 million pounds to 17.8 million pounds, but the money did not disappear from the category entirely. It moved. Sales of smaller 2ml reusable vapes rose 11%, larger 10ml-plus kits rose 24% in value, and pod systems climbed 21%, according to industry tracking cited by compliance auditor Serve Legal.

“The search data lines up with what retailers are seeing on the shelf,” said Marc Pitts, Co-founder of Discount Vape Pen. “People are not searching for disposables because there is less reason to. The ban removed the product from sale, but the falling search volume through 2023 and 2024 suggests interest was already softening well before the law caught up with it.”

Not a Clean Break

The transition has not been tidy. Some retailers kept selling banned stock after the deadline, and enforcement bodies have flagged continued non-compliance in parts of the country. There is also evidence that a meaningful share of consumers are treating small reusable devices as de facto disposables, using a 2ml refillable pod once or twice and discarding it, which blunts some of the environmental gain the ban was designed to deliver.

Even so, the direction of the underlying search interest is unambiguous. Fewer people are actively searching for a product category that is no longer legally on sale, and the volume that remains looks to be settling at a level less than half of where it sat three years ago.

Why It Matters Beyond the UK

Search demand is normally a leading indicator for purchase intent, and the scale of this decline gives retailers and manufacturers a clearer signal than sales figures alone about how durable the shift to reusable hardware is likely to be. For a market built for years around cheap, single-use devices, a near 60% fall in the search category that defined it is a significant marker of how far consumer behaviour has already moved, ban or no ban.

It also raises a practical question for anyone still holding disposable stock, personal or retail. The ban only bars new sale and supply, not the use of devices bought before 1 June 2025, so a portion of the search volume that remains is likely to be existing owners looking for guidance rather than new buyers looking for a purchase, a distinction that is easy to miss if search demand is read as a simple stand-in for sales.

Methodology: search volume data drawn from UK keyword search tools for the term “disposable vape,” compared as a 2023 monthly average against a January to June 2026 monthly average. Supporting figures on the ban, its environmental rationale, and its market impact are drawn from GOV.UK, Action on Smoking and Health (ASH), and retail compliance reporting by Serve Legal.

Image: Adobe Stock – WW

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