France’s Finance Committee Rejects 2026 Vaping Tax, Backs Online Sales Ban

Oct.23
France’s Finance Committee Rejects 2026 Vaping Tax, Backs Online Sales Ban
France’s National Assembly Finance Committee voted to oppose the government’s plan in Article 23 of the 2026 budget bill to tax vaping products at €0.30/10mL for low-nicotine liquids and €0.50/10mL for others (with typical bottles priced €5–€7). Lawmakers arguing against the tax said vaping is less harmful than combustible cigarettes and can aid cessation; others warned of a gateway effect for youth and sustained nicotine dependence.

Key points

 

  • Finance Committee rejected Article 23 of the 2026 budget bill to tax e-liquids at €0.30/10mL (low-nicotine) and €0.50/10mL (others).
  • A Droite républicaine amendment keeps the 2026 vape tax at zero; the outcome still requires a plenary vote.
  • The committee approved an online sales ban within Article 23; the sector says e-commerce is ~25–30% of the French market.
  • Anti-tax MPs cite lower harm vs. combustible cigarettes and cessation value; supporters warn of youth gateway and nicotine addiction risks.
  • The EU excise from 1 Jan 2028 looms, signalling future policy convergence pressures on France.

 


 

2Firsts, October 22, 2025 — According to French media, the National Assembly’s Finance Committee has rejected the government’s plan to introduce a vaping excise under Article 23 of the 2026 finance bill. 

 

The proposal would have levied €0.30 per 10mL on low-nicotine liquids and €0.50 per 10mL on others, with typical bottles retailing for €5–€7.

 

During debate, Aurélien Le Coq argued that e-cigarettes, while not risk-free, are significantly less harmful than combustible cigarettes and serve as a cessation aid for many users. 

 

Pierre Cazeneuve added personal testimony about quitting smoking, contrasting vaping’s role in harm reduction with tobacco’s ~75,000 deaths annually in France.

 

On the other side, Perrine Goulet characterised vaping as a potential gateway to smoking among youth, stressing persistent nicotine addiction and possible impacts on brain development and respiratory health, and said “a modest tax makes sense.”

 

The committee approved a Droite républicaine amendment to maintain a zero tax on vaping products in 2026, while endorsing the ban on online sales within Article 23. With e-commerce representing about 25–30% of sales, stakeholders warned of channel disruption if confirmed by the full chamber.

 

Next steps include plenary examination of the finance bill. In parallel, the European Union intends to apply a common excise to vaping products from January 1, 2028, suggesting eventual alignment of national policy.

 

Image credit: lcp.fr

 

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