Monday, April 27, 2026

A Deeper Dive into High School Vaping from the 2025 National Youth Tobacco Survey

 

I previously took a deep dive into high school vaping data reported in the 2023 National Youth Survey (here).  That analysis demonstrated that, contrary to the government narrative, vaping was not an epidemic or crisis threatening to enslave a generation of teens to nicotine.  The same can be said today, with even more certainty, based on the FDA’s recently released 2025 data.

In 2025, there were 1.1 million current users (i.e., past 30 days) of e-cigarettes or other vaping products.  This number is far lower than that at vaping’s peak in 2019 (here), yet anti-tobacco crusaders persist in claiming there is a public health crisis. 

The chart on the left breaks down the survey’s 1.13 million vapers to calculate the actual number of exclusive, or “virgin” vapers.  I use a sequential subtraction method to isolate factors integral to vaping.  The chart reflects CDC weighting to estimate the numbers in detail, but in the following text, acknowledging real world facts, I’ll use abbreviated estimates.

There were 16 million high schoolers in 2025; about 7.1% of those were current vapers, meaning they had used the product at least once in the past 30 days.  About 213,000 current vapers were also current smokers, which leaves 921,000. 

Of these remaining vapers, 337,000 “ever” smoked a cigarette, even one puff, leaving 584,000.

After subtracting another 86,000 who “ever” smoked a cigar, we have 498,000 current vapers.

Finally, there is a key factor that nicotine-obsessed crusaders completely ignore, despite its coverage in the NYTS: “ever” vaping marijuana, tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) or cannabidiol (CBD).  There were 292,000 current vapers who had also vaped those marijuana-related products.

Now we have a reasonable estimate for virgin vapers, or those high schoolers who did not have any other exposure to similar tobacco or marijuana products.  The grand total is 206,184, representing only 1.3% of all high school students.

For further context, consider the frequency of vaping among virgin vapers: 67% had vaped only 1-9 days in the past month, 12% had vaped 10-19 days, and 21% had vaped 20-30 days.  While the latter group is at risk for being addicted to nicotine and vaping, these 42,700 frequent vapers represent just 3.8% of all high school vapers.  More importantly, they represent only 0.3% of all U.S. high school students.

Vaping among high school students is a legitimate concern, but vaping is neither an epidemic nor a teen health crisis.  It’s time that public health officials acknowledge that vaping, smoking cigarettes and cigars, and using THC/CBD are closely interconnected risk behaviors.  Vaping is by far the least of those. 

Public health leaders should stop leaning on an imaginary teen vaping epidemic to deny less harmful products to adult tobacco smokers, 480,000 of whom will die this and every year.


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