The Yellow Springs Village Council has unanimously approved an immediate 180-day moratorium on new smoke shops. Passed as an emergency ordinance on June 1, the freeze halts the issuance of all zoning permits, building permits, and certificates of occupancy for new tobacco and vape retailers.
Under the new ordinance, a “smoke shop” is defined as any retail establishment where 20% or more of the floor, shelf, or display area is dedicated to:
Tobacco and nicotine products
E-cigarettes and vapes
Hemp-derived or synthetic cannabinoid products
The temporary ban does not affect the village’s six existing smoke shops. Instead, it gives newly appointed Planning and Zoning Administrator Nia Holt time to draft local regulations, such as establishing protective boundaries around schools and parks.
Local smoke shops have already faced severe economic headwinds this year. Ohio’s Senate Bill 56, which banned intoxicating hemp products in March, wiped out up to 70% of revenue for some local retailers, forcing storefront closures and shifts to alternative products like mushrooms.
Council members supported the pause to maintain business diversity and address concerns over youth-targeted marketing. “We know the vape industry has targeted young people,” noted Council Vice President Angie Hsu, emphasizing the community’s desire for stronger local protections to keep these products out of young hands.
The Ministry of Health has acknowledged a significant discrepancy in New Zealand’s vape retailer database, revealing that authorities cannot provide a precise, real-time count of active vendors nationwide. This regulatory blind spot persists despite years of political promises to cap store numbers and growing public health concerns over the ubiquity of nicotine products near schools.
During the 2023 election campaign, both major political parties pledged to drastically restrict the market, promising to cap the number of vape stores at just 600. Three years later, thousands of shops continue to operate across the country, and determining the exact number remains an elusive task for regulators.
The Retail Split: Specialist vs. General Retailers
Under New Zealand law, vape retailers are divided into two distinct legal categories: Specialist Vape Retailers (SVRs) and General Vape Retailers (such as dairies, supermarkets, and service stations). SVRs are permitted to sell a full range of flavors but must obtain explicit approval from the Ministry of Health for every physical storefront they operate. Currently, there are 1,337 approved Specialist Vaping Premises (AVPs) in New Zealand—meaning the country now has significantly more specialty vape shops than dedicated liquor stores.
Tracking general retailers is far more complicated. These businesses are restricted to selling basic flavors and must file a Regulated Product Seller (RPS) notification. According to recent Ministry of Health data, there are 1,694 registered general retail businesses operating more than 2,100 individual stores.
Combining these figures yields approximately 3,400 active retail locations. However, this is barely half of the 7,000 individual stores the Ministry of Health estimated were operating just two years ago.
Retailer Category
Current Active Locations
Flavor Restrictions
Regulatory Requirement
Specialist Vape Retailers (SVR)
1,337
Full variety of flavors allowed
Approved Vaping Premise (AVP) license per store
General Vape Retailers
2,100+
Limited flavors only (no complex/sweet flavors)
Regulated Product Seller (RPS) notification
Responding to queries regarding this massive statistical drop, a Ministry of Health spokesperson stated that earlier estimates of 7,000+ stores were “indicative rather than precise point-in-time counts,” reflecting historical market intelligence. The ministry maintains that the discrepancy does not automatically point to widespread illegal operations, though they acknowledge a “gap” and are working with Health NZ to verify registrations during routine field inspections.
Vaping Overtakes Smoking Amid Regulatory Shifts
The debate over retailer numbers coincides with a massive demographic shift in nicotine consumption. According to the latest New Zealand Health Survey, daily vaping has climbed to 11.7% of the adult population (approximately 509,000 people), up from a mere fraction of a percent a decade ago. Conversely, daily smoking has plummeted to historic lows of 6.8%.
While adult consumption rises, youth vaping has shown signs of decline. Daily vaping among Year 10 students dropped from 8.7% in 2024 to 7.1% in 2025. Nevertheless, underage access remains a persistent issue. During the Ministry of Health’s Controlled Purchase Operations last year, 10% of audited stores illegally sold vaping products to minors under the age of 18.
The Policy Debate: Access vs. Restriction
The ubiquity of retail outlets has polarized public health advocates and industry representatives. Anti-vaping advocates argue that the current density of stores normalizes nicotine addiction among youth. Research indicates that nearly 30% of New Zealand’s vape stores are located within 400 meters of a school, a reality that advocates say undermines the product’s original purpose as a smoking cessation tool.
“If these are supposed to be helping smokers quit, why on Earth have we got so many stores?” asks Marnie Wilton, co-founder of Vape-Free Kids NZ. Wilton argues that reducing the sheer number of outlets is the only way to make enforcement manageable for government inspectors.
Conversely, the Vaping Industry Association of New Zealand (VIANZ) strongly opposes arbitrary caps on store numbers. VIANZ Chair Jonathan Devery warns that restricting legal retail access risks pushing adult smokers back to combustible tobacco or driving demand into unregulated black markets, pointing to Australia’s highly restricted pharmacy-only model as a failure.
Instead of capping store numbers, VIANZ advocates for closing legal loopholes, such as the “store-within-a-store” model, where dairies partition off a small section of their shop to qualify as an SVR. Closing this loophole would ensure that only dedicated specialty stores with strict age-verification protocols can sell high-flavor products.
https://ecigator.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/1739512621-Australia-vs-New-Zealand-Smoking-Rates-Vaping-Policies.jpg6751200Matthew Mahttps://ecigator.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/ecigator-logo-white.pngMatthew Ma2026-06-08 02:37:192026-06-08 02:37:21How Many Vape Shops Are in New Zealand? Authorities Admit Data Gap
The Pittsburgh City Council has advanced a long-awaited zoning proposal designed to heavily restrict the location and operations of new vape and tobacco shops. Sponsored by Councilors Bobby Wilson and Erika Strassburger, the bill aims to curb youth access to nicotine and unregulated synthetic cannabinoids.
The Kinston City Council is set to review strict new zoning regulations for tobacco, vape, and CBD shops on May 19. This legislative push follows a massive police raid on local shops that seized illegal substances and millions in cash, prompting city officials to prioritize public safety and orderly development.
The South Korean liquid e-cigarette industry is bracing for a direct blow as the revised Tobacco Business Act takes effect on January 24. This development occurs amidst a rapid expansion of the previously unregulated synthetic nicotine market, directly resulting in widespread fears of mass store closures as retailers struggle to meet new, stringent licensing requirements.
https://ecigator.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/1776045804-South-Korea-Vape-Law-Synthetic-Nicotine-Regulation.jpg6751200Matthew Mahttps://ecigator.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/ecigator-logo-white.pngMatthew Ma2026-04-13 02:11:222026-04-13 02:11:24South Korea’s Expanded Tobacco Law Force Vape Shops to Close
Standard processors like Stripe and Square routinely shut down vape businesses without warning. Here is the definitive guide to securing stable, scalable, and compliant high-risk payment processing.
Southport, North Carolina, has officially amended its Unified Development Ordinance to restrict where new vape and smoke shops can operate. Driven by youth protection and historic preservation goals, the unopposed measure mandates strict distance requirements from schools, parks, and existing competitors, though it stops short of a total ban.
The Bluefield Planning Commission has officially recommended a new zoning ordinance targeting vape and tobacco retailers. Expected to face a final City Board vote in April, the measure redefines what constitutes a vape shop and enforces strict 1,500-foot distance buffers from youth-centric locations.
Edwardsville aldermen voted 4-2 to implement a temporary moratorium on new vape shop licenses, effective April 1 through October 1, 2026. The pause allows city officials to review and refine licensing structures that currently categorize all tobacco retailers under a single, broad permit, following persistent concerns from residents and school administrators regarding youth nicotine access.
The City of Dalton, Georgia, has officially prohibited the opening of new businesses primarily focused on selling vape and tobacco products. The immediate ban targets storefronts dedicating 25% or more of their revenue or floor space to nicotine products, aiming to regulate the rapid proliferation of smoke shops within city limits.
The 25% Threshold: Banned vs. Exempt Businesses
The Dalton Mayor and Council approved the sweeping restriction in a 3-0 vote, with the ordinance taking effect immediately. City attorney Jonathan Bledsoe stated the legislation was designed to provide much-needed oversight over the growing local industry. The following table outlines the specific criteria of the new zoning ordinance:
Business Category
Ordinance Status
Key Criteria
New Standalone Shops
Banned
≥ 25% of annual revenue OR floor space dedicated to vape/tobacco.
Existing Vape Shops
Exempt (Grandfathered)
Permitted to continue standard operations.
Convenience Stores / Gas Stations
Exempt
Must keep vape/tobacco sales and display under the 25% threshold.
Surprisingly, local industry veterans have voiced support for the cap. Margaret Kiker, a manager at AK Smoke and Vape Shop with over a decade of experience, stated, “Enough is enough. We were actually surprised they hadn’t done it sooner.”
However, Kiker highlighted a significant loophole in the ordinance: youth access in exempt locations. She noted that unregulated convenience stores, which are exempt from the ban, still allow minors to easily enter environments where tobacco products are sold. She expressed hope that the city council will eventually expand regulations to cover these general retailers.
Dalton’s proactive ban reflects a growing municipal trend across the United States to cap the physical footprint of the vaping industry. By grandfathering the dozen existing stores but halting new development, the city effectively stabilizes its current market saturation. However, as local managers have pointed out, exempting convenience stores from strict oversight leaves an ongoing regulatory blind spot regarding youth access to nicotine products.
https://ecigator.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/1774075317-Dalton-vape-shop-ban.jpg6751200Matthew Mahttps://ecigator.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/ecigator-logo-white.pngMatthew Ma2026-03-21 06:49:032026-03-21 07:00:52Georgia: Dalton Bans New Vape Shops within City Limits