US-made disposable vapes still legal in Texas under SB 2024

Last updated: July 2026

Texas didn't ban every vape. Senate Bill 2024 took effect September 1, 2025, and it bans vapor products made, filled, or assembled in "foreign adversary" countries like China. It also bans vapes that contain cannabinoids, kratom, kava, mushrooms, or alcohol. Here's the part most headlines skip: the law exempts vapes manufactured in the United States. So if your device is US-made and nicotine-only, it's still legal to sell and buy in Texas. Disposables, flavored e-liquids, and pouches aren't gone. The China-made ones are the ones pulling off shelves. This guide breaks down what changed, what's banned versus what's still legal, and how to check your own device. Adults 21+ only. This is educational, not legal advice.

Key Takeaways
  • Texas SB 2024 (effective September 1, 2025) bans vapes made in China, Russia, Iran, or North Korea, plus any vape with cannabinoids, kratom, kava, mushrooms, or alcohol.
  • US-made nicotine vapes are exempt. They stay legal to sell and buy in Texas.
  • Texas has no flavor ban. Flavored e-liquids and disposables are legal on US-made devices.
  • Most big-name disposables are made overseas, so many popular brands are affected.
  • To stay compliant, look for the country of manufacture and choose Made in USA options.

Did Texas Ban Vapes in 2026?

No, Texas did not ban all vapes. The state passed a targeted law, not a blanket ban. Senate Bill 2024 restricts specific categories of vapor products while leaving others fully legal.

The confusion comes from how the law is written. SB 2024 doesn't name brands. It bans vapes based on where they're manufactured and what's inside them. That's a different approach from states with flavor bans or age-only rules.

So the honest answer is: some vapes are now illegal to sell in Texas, and many popular ones are affected. But US-made nicotine devices remain legal. If you've heard "Texas banned vapes," the accurate version is "Texas banned China-made and cannabinoid vapes." For the national picture across all 50 states, see our vape laws by state guide.

What Changed: SB 2024 Explained

Texas Senate Bill 2024 was signed into law on June 20, 2025, and took effect September 1, 2025. It's the core law behind the "Texas vape ban" you're reading about.

SB 2024 does three main things:

  • Bans foreign-adversary manufacturing. Any e-cigarette or vapor product made, filled, or assembled in China, Russia, Iran, or North Korea is banned from sale in Texas.
  • Bans added substances. Vapes containing cannabinoids (like Delta-8 or THC), kratom, kava, mushrooms, or alcohol are prohibited.
  • Restricts deceptive devices and marketing. Disguised or novelty devices and child-appealing packaging are limited.

The manufacturing rule is the big one. Most disposable vapes on the US market are produced in China. Under SB 2024, those products can't legally be sold in Texas, regardless of brand reputation or flavor.

There's a second law worth knowing. Texas House Bill 4758 took effect January 1, 2024. It's the "Protecting Children from E-Cigarette Advertising Act," and it makes kid-appealing vape marketing a Class B misdemeanor. That covers cartoons, fictional characters, celebrities, and food-mimicking imagery. HB 4758 is about marketing. SB 2024 is about the products themselves.

Both laws share a goal: keeping unregulated overseas products and youth-targeted marketing out of Texas. Neither law bans nicotine vaping for adults 21 and up. The FDA authorization angle matters here too, and we cover it in our FDA approved vapes guide.

What's Banned vs What's Still Legal in Texas

Here's the split in plain terms. A vape is affected by SB 2024 if it's made overseas in a listed country or if it contains a restricted substance. A vape stays legal if it's US-made and nicotine-only.

Restricted / Banned Still Legal
Vapes made, filled, or assembled in China, Russia, Iran, or North Korea Vapes manufactured in the United States
Vapes with cannabinoids (Delta-8, THC, THCA) Nicotine-only e-liquids and disposables
Vapes with kratom, kava, mushrooms, or alcohol US-made flavored vapes (no flavor ban in Texas)
Disguised or novelty "toy" devices US-made nicotine pouches like Zyn and Rogue

The key word is "manufactured." A brand can be American-owned but still make its devices in China. Under SB 2024, ownership doesn't matter. Country of manufacture does. That's why a brand-by-brand check is worth doing, and we built a brand-by-brand Texas guide for exactly that.

One more note: SB 2024 doesn't criminalize adult possession of a device you already own. It restricts what retailers can legally sell. For a deeper look at the disposable category specifically, see are disposable vapes banned in Texas.

The Made in USA Exception: What You Can Still Buy

SB 2024's exemption for US-manufactured vapes is the practical takeaway for Texas shoppers. If a nicotine device is built in America, it's legal to sell and buy. A handful of brands fit that description, and they're the safe picks right now.

The Fifty Bar V2 20K is one of the clearest examples. It's built in the USA by Beard Vape Co. out of Thousand Oaks, California, with American-made e-liquid. The device runs 20,000 puffs from a 14mL tank with dual parallel mesh coils and a digital display. Prices start from $17.99. There's also the fruit-focused Fifty Bar x Fruitia 20K at around $21.99, which runs an 18mL tank.

For a budget-friendly US-made option, the Juice Bar JB5000 delivers 5,000 puffs from a 13mL tank with a mesh coil and 40+ flavors. It starts from $14.99. Want more capacity? The Juice Bar JB7500 runs around $19.99.

Here are US-made options that stay legal under SB 2024:

One caution: not every device with American branding is actually built in the USA. Some brands make their e-liquid domestically but assemble the hardware overseas, which still triggers SB 2024. When in doubt, stick to the devices in our Made in USA collection, where the US manufacturing is confirmed.

Browse the full Made in USA vapes collection for every device that qualifies. For a complete breakdown, our Made in USA vapes list for Texas covers specs, prices, and flavors side by side. Adults 21+ only.

Are Flavored Vapes Still Legal in Texas?

Yes, flavored vapes are still legal in Texas. The state has no flavor ban, unlike California, Massachusetts, and New York. SB 2024 says nothing about restricting flavors.

This surprises a lot of shoppers. Flavor bans made big news in other states, so people assume Texas followed. It didn't. As long as a flavored device is US-made and nicotine-only, its fruit, dessert, menthol, and candy profiles are all legal to sell.

The Fifty Bar V2 20K, for example, offers 30+ flavors across its Black and White Series, and every one is legal in Texas because the device is US-made. The Juice Bar JB5000 carries 40+ flavors on the same logic. For the full flavor rundown, see are flavored vapes banned in Texas.

A Note on THC, Delta-8, and THCA Vapes

SB 2024 restricts vapes that contain cannabinoids, and that includes Delta-8, THC, and THCA products. Under the law, cannabinoid vapes fall on the banned side, separate from the country-of-manufacture rule.

Texas cannabinoid policy is contested and changes quickly. This section is educational only. We don't sell or recommend THC, Delta-8, or THCA vapes as legal to buy in Texas, and nothing here is a purchase suggestion. If you want to understand the legal landscape, our national explainers cover it: is Delta-8 legal in 2026 and THCA vapes overview. For the Texas-specific status, see Delta-8, THCA, and THC vapes in Texas. Always verify current Texas law before acting.

How to Check If Your Vape Is Still Legal in Texas

The fastest way to check a device is to confirm two things: where it's manufactured and what it contains. If it's US-made and nicotine-only, it's legal under SB 2024.

Run through this quick checklist:

  • Check the country of manufacture. Look at the packaging or product page. "Made in USA" is what you want. "Made in China" means it's restricted.
  • Check the contents. Nicotine or nicotine-free is fine. Cannabinoids, kratom, kava, mushrooms, or alcohol are not.
  • Ignore the brand's home country. An American-owned brand can still manufacture overseas. Manufacturing location is what the law measures.
  • Watch for novelty shapes. Disguised or toy-like devices are restricted separately.
  • When unsure, choose documented US-made devices. The Made in USA lineup removes the guesswork.

Retailers carry the compliance burden, so a reputable Texas seller should only stock devices that meet SB 2024. Still, checking yourself is smart. Our brand-by-brand guide lists popular brands and where they land, and our why Texas banned vapes explainer covers the reasoning behind the law.

The Bottom Line for Texas Vapers

Texas tightened its vape rules, but it didn't shut the door on adult vaping. SB 2024 pulls China-made and cannabinoid products off shelves while keeping US-made nicotine devices legal. Flavors stay legal too.

If you want the simplest path to a compliant device, start with the Made in USA lineup. Options like the Fifty Bar V2 20K and Juice Bar JB5000 are built in America, carry a wide range of flavors, and meet the SB 2024 exemption. Explore the full Made in USA vapes collection to find your next device. Adults 21+ only.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are vapes banned in Texas?

Not all of them. Texas SB 2024, effective September 1, 2025, bans vapes manufactured in China, Russia, Iran, or North Korea, plus any vape containing cannabinoids, kratom, kava, mushrooms, or alcohol. US-made nicotine vapes are exempt and stay legal to sell and buy. So many popular overseas brands are affected, but American-made devices remain legal.

What vapes are still legal in Texas?

US-made nicotine vapes are still legal in Texas under SB 2024. That includes devices like the Fifty Bar V2 20K and the Juice Bar JB5000, both built in the USA, along with US-made e-liquids such as Keep It 100 and US-made nicotine pouches like Zyn and Rogue. The device must be manufactured in the United States and contain no cannabinoids, kratom, kava, mushrooms, or alcohol.

Are flavored vapes banned in Texas?

No. Texas has no flavor ban, unlike California, Massachusetts, and New York. SB 2024 does not restrict flavors. As long as a flavored device is US-made and nicotine-only, its fruit, dessert, menthol, and candy flavors are all legal to sell in Texas.

Why did Texas ban China-made vapes?

Texas SB 2024 targets vapes made in "foreign adversary" nations, including China, over concerns about unregulated overseas products entering the market. The law bans any e-cigarette manufactured, filled, or assembled in China, Russia, Iran, or North Korea. It exempts vapes manufactured in the United States, which is why US-made devices remain legal.

Is my current vape illegal to own in Texas?

SB 2024 restricts what retailers can legally sell in Texas, not personal possession of a device you already own. The law removes China-made and cannabinoid vapes from store shelves. If you want a compliant replacement, choose a US-made nicotine device. Laws change quickly, so verify current Texas law or consult an attorney for your situation.

This article is for educational purposes only and is not legal advice. Vaping laws change quickly, and this content reflects our understanding as of July 2026. Verify current Texas law or consult a licensed attorney before making decisions. Vape products are for adults 21 and older. This content contains references to nicotine, which is an addictive chemical.