FDA says Juul can continue to sell tobacco and menthol e-cigarettes


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Summary

FDA authorization

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has allowed Juul Labs to continue selling its e-cigarettes and refill cartridges after a multiyear review into potential health risks.

Public health debate

Representatives from Juul and health expert Derek Yach, a former World Health Organization employee, argue that vaping helps adult smokers quit traditional cigarettes.

Youth vaping concerns

Juul has previously faced criticism for teen usage of its products and was largely blamed for the rise in youth vaping.


Full story

Popular e-cigarette maker Juul Labs announced that the Food & Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the continued sale of its e-cigarettes and refill cartridges. The decision ends a multiyear review during which the organization investigated potential health risks.

Juul in the clear

The FDA ordered Juul to stop selling its e-cigarettes in 2022 to assess the products, nearly driving Juul to bankruptcy. Juul says the FDA has now decided its products are “appropriate for the protection of public health.”

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An FDA spokesperson says this authorization doesn’t mean the products are FDA-approved, according to The Wall Street Journal. It means that the e-cigarettes meet the legal standards for marketing tobacco products in the U.S.

“Today’s FDA authorization of JUUL products marks an important step toward making the cigarette obsolete,” K.C. Crosthwaite, Juul Labs CEO, told Straight Arrow News in a statement. “More than 2 million adult Americans have switched completely away from deadly cigarettes using JUUL products.”

Straight Arrow News spoke with health expert Derek Yach, a former employee of the World Health Organization (WHO) and former president of the Foundation for a Smoke-Free World.

He agrees with Crosthwaite on this being a good day for people trying to quit cigarettes.

“[I feel] great happiness for the smokers who are trying desperately to get off their product, particularly those using menthol cigarettes, who now have an alternative that’s going to give them both the flavor and the nicotine that is going to have a huge benefit,” Yach said.

“I come from public health, where the definition of tobacco control is not about ending smoking only. It’s about ending the death and disease from smoking,” Yach continued. “And I know that vaping products now represent the most effective way of achieving complete cessation in smokers, far more effective than their nicotine replacement therapy.”

Policy differences

The ban on Juul products began under former President Joe Biden, whose administration took more of a hard line on vaping with a focus on eliminating teen vaping.

“Having somebody inside the FDA who wasn’t particularly supportive and the data and marketing of Juul not being particularly helpful contributed to not just setting back the progress of Juul itself but the entire vape sector for a while,” Yach said.

Many expected regulations to then ease under President Donald Trump, who reportedly promised to save vaping while on the campaign trail in 2024.

Teenage vaping

One of Juul’s biggest issues in the company’s history came from the pushback of teenagers using their products. Juul was largely blamed for the increase in teens using e-cigarettes.

The company says it will continue to build on the progress made to reduce underage nicotine use.

“Underage use of our products is down 98% since 2019, to one-half of one percent of youth,” Crosthwaite said.

Recent FDA data support the fact that fewer teens are using vapes.

“We’re at the lowest level of vaping and smoking for youth in the country and the lowest level of adult smoking in 50 years,” Yach said.

What does it mean for big tobacco?

While both Juul and Yach celebrate this decision as helping people eliminate cigarettes from their lives, big tobacco companies may view this in a different light.

Many of the biggest tobacco companies in the country, such as R.J. Reynolds and British American Tobacco, have already begun investing in e-cigarettes, and this ruling could encourage them to stay on that path.

“They’re betting big time that the categories of vape, heated tobacco, nicotine, patches will actually become the dominant source of revenue, which it is in many parts of the world,” Yach said. “They would see this as a signal that they’ve got to keep going on the track they’re already on.”

Despite that, a new study has raised concerns over the health of vaping. That study found some popular electronic cigarettes produce toxic metals at levels much higher than those found in conventional cigarettes.

That study shows that sometimes a day’s worth of vaping can release more lead than 20 packs of traditional cigarettes.

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Why this story matters

The FDA's decision to allow Juul e-cigarettes to remain on the market after a lengthy review impacts public health policies, tobacco industry dynamics and ongoing debates about vaping's risks and benefits.

FDA regulation

The FDA's review and conditional authorization of Juul products highlight the complexity of regulating e-cigarettes amid concerns about both public health and legal marketing standards.

Public health impact

Statements from health experts and cited studies reflect ongoing debates about whether vaping products aid cigarette cessation or pose new health risks, influencing how policymakers and the public view e-cigarette use.

Youth and industry response

Claims from Juul and corroborating data suggest teen vaping rates have declined, while tobacco companies' investment in alternative nicotine products illustrates shifting industry strategies in response to evolving regulations.

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Synthesized coverage insights across 99 media outlets

Behind the numbers

Juul was once valued at over $13 billion but has since lost significant market share and paid billions to settle lawsuits over youth vaping. According to regulatory filings, recent federal surveys indicate teen vaping dropped to a 10-year low, with about 12.6% of teen vapers still using Juul.

Debunking

Despite claims that e-cigarettes are safe, the FDA and health authorities reiterate that no e-cigarette product is safe, nor are they “FDA approved.” The authorization allows for legal marketing but is not an endorsement of product safety.

Quote bank

K.C. Crosthwaite, Juul’s CEO, said, “This is an important milestone for the company and I think we made a scientifically sound case for the role that menthol can play in e-vapor.” Yolonda Richardson, CEO of Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, countered, “It is a big step in the wrong direction to authorize sales of the product that was responsible for this public health crisis.”

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Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

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Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left frame the FDA’s reversal on Juul’s sales as a fraught “relief” amid ongoing legal battles and public health concerns, emphasizing Juul’s role in fueling teen vaping through “underage use” and highlighting opposition from parents and antitobacco groups.
  • Not enough unique coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Media outlets on the right adopt a more positive, market-friendly tone, spotlighting the FDA’s “authorization” as an endorsement of adult choice and business freedom, often downplaying health controversies.

Media landscape

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99 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • The Food and Drug Administration is allowing Juul to keep its e-cigarettes on the market, providing relief to the company amid past controversies over teen vaping trends.
  • FDA regulators stated that Juul's studies show its e-cigarettes are less harmful for adult smokers who switch to vaping.
  • Juul CEO K.C. Crosthwaite said this is an important milestone, claiming a scientifically sound case for the role of menthol in e-vapor.
  • The FDA specified that the announcement does not approve or endorse e-cigarettes and warned non-smokers against using them.

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Key points from the Center

  • The Food and Drug Administration has authorized Juul's e-cigarettes to remain on the market, providing relief to the company after years of struggle.
  • The FDA emphasized that the announcement is not an endorsement, warning that non-smokers should not use e-cigarettes.
  • Juul's studies claim its e-cigarettes are less harmful for adult smokers who switch from traditional smoking.
  • In 2022, Juul settled thousands of lawsuits related to vaping for $1.7 billion.

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