Medicaid and most health insurance plans cover smoking cessation. Talk to your health care provider about quitting and medications that might be right for you.
You can also contact the New York State Quitline for FREE and confidential help in English and Spanish. Call 1-866-NYQUITS (1-866-697-8487), text (716) 309-4688, or visit http://www.nysmokefree.com for information or chat with a Quit Coach.
Youth and young adults (ages 13-24) who vape and want to quit: Text DROPTHEVAPE to 88709 for FREE and anonymous support 24/7, including messages from other young people to help you break free from vaping.
You are Here: Home Page > Tobacco > New York State Tobacco Control LawsNew York State is a national leader in tobacco control policy. The state's strong and effective laws and regulations protect youth from deadly nicotine addiction by reducing access to tobacco and vaping products; protect New Yorkers from exposure to dangerous secondhand cigarette smoke and e-cigarette aerosol; and hold tobacco and vapor product manufacturers to transparency.
The New York State Tobacco Control Program works to create communities open to policy, systems, and environmental changes that prevent tobacco and e-cigarette access by youth and eliminate exposure to toxic secondhand smoke and vaping aerosol. In addition to these state laws, many organizations, businesses, municipalities, and counties have adopted binding or nonbinding policies and resolutions that prohibit smoking and e-cigarette use. These policies include prohibiting smoking and e-cigarette use in multiunit housing; banning smoking, tobacco use, and e-cigarette use in additional outdoor spaces; restricting the number and location of stores that sell tobacco and e-cigarettes; prohibiting the acceptance of tobacco company funds or services; and working to reduce the impact of adolescent exposure to smoking in movies and on the internet.
For more information on tobacco control policy solutions, visit Commercial Tobacco Control – Countering the Tobacco Epidemic.
Enacted in 1989 and last amended in 2022, Public Health Law, Article 13-E, known as the Clean Indoor Air Act, prohibits the smoking of tobacco products and the use of vapor products in nearly all indoor and certain outdoor public areas and workplaces. Municipalities and counties may enact local laws that are stronger than state law. For comprehensive information on the Act, visit Clean Indoor Air Act.
The Clean Indoor Air Act was amended in 2021 to include prohibiting cannabis smoking and vaping in all locations in which smoking and vaping tobacco products are currently prohibited.
Almost all adults who smoke cigarettes started in their teens. Public Health Law 13-F, known as the Adolescent Tobacco Use Prevention Act (commonly referred to as ATUPA), regulates the sale of tobacco and vaping products to restrict their access by youth and young adults. ATUPA violations can result in civil penalties or retailer registration suspension or revocation. Recent amendments:
Tobacco and vapor product dealers: For more information, visit Signage and Guidance for Tobacco and Vapor Product Businesses.
As of September 1, 2023, New York State has the highest state cigarette tax in the country. The cigarette excise tax increased by $1.00 to $5.35 per pack of 20 cigarettes or little cigars. The tax on moist snuff is $2.00 per ounce, and the tax on cigars and other tobacco products is 75% of wholesale value. Vapor products, with or without nicotine, are taxed at 20% of the retail price. The tax is paid for by the person buying the product and collected by vapor products retailers, who are responsible for collecting the tax and paying and reporting it to the Department of Taxation and Finance. For more information on the vapor product supplemental sales tax, see Vapor Products.
Localities may levy additional tobacco taxes with the approval of the state legislature. New York City imposes a local tax of $1.50 per pack, which, in September 2023, brought the combined state and local tax to $6.85. In addition, New York City Local Law 145 requires retailers to sell cigarettes for a minimum retail price of $13.00 per pack.
Every retail dealer of cigarettes, other commercial tobacco products, and vapor products and every owner or operator of vending machines that sell cigarettes or tobacco products in New York State must register with the Department of Taxation and Finance. In 2023, 16,759 tobacco and vapor product retailers were registered with the Department of Taxation and Finance. Cigarette wholesalers, retailers and distributors also must be licensed. Municipalities may establish their own licensing requirements.
Beginning December 1, 2019, every person who intends to sell vapor products in New York State must apply for and receive a certificate of registration from the Department of Taxation and Finance before selling them. Registration certificates are valid for one year and must be displayed. The law gives the State Health Department enforcement oversight to ensure compliance with all tobacco and e-cigarette laws, including adhering to the minimum legal sale age, display of approved signage, restricting the sale of flavored vaping products other than tobacco-flavored, and storing tobacco and vapor products out of consumers' reach. See New York State Tax Law, Article 28-C to learn more.
Enacted in 1985, the Cigarette Marketing Standards Act, Tax Law, Article 20-A, prohibits the sale of cigarettes below cost and makes it illegal for retailers to intentionally avoid the collection or payment of taxes. The law includes fines and penalties for violations.
In 2019, a national outbreak of e-cigarette, or vaping, product use-associated lung injury (EVALI) occurred. Laboratory data showed that vitamin E acetate, an additive in some vaping products, was strongly linked to this outbreak. To increase oversight of vapor products through the distribution chain, Public Health Law Article 13-E Section 1399-MM-3 authorizes the State Health Commissioner to promulgate rules and regulations governing the sale and distribution of carrier oils that are suspected of causing acute illness and have been identified as a chemical of concern by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Public Health Law Article 17 requires manufacturers of vapor products distributed, sold, or offered for sale in New York State, both retail or wholesale, to disclose the ingredients of vapor products, toxic metals in heating elements, and byproducts of the aerosol produced by the normal use of vaping products to the State Health Commissioner for public record and post these on their websites.
All liquid nicotine (e-liquid) must be packaged in a child-resistant bottle designed to prevent accidental exposure. Violators are subject to a civil penalty of up to $1,000. See General Business Law, Article 26, Section 399-GG to read the law.
Enacted in 2000 and implemented in 2004, the Cigarette Fire Safety Act, Executive Law Article 6-C Section 156-C, established fire safety standards for cigarettes sold in New York State. The act requires manufacturers to certify that all cigarettes they offer for sale in New York State meet a specific ignition propensity standard to prevent fires caused by burning cigarettes left unattended and particularly those held by smokers who fall asleep during use. New York State was the first jurisdiction in the world to establish such a requirement. Cigarette-caused fires and deaths have declined since the implementation of the law.