In 2023, Finland did what many European politicians are pushing for: they banned flavored nicotine pouches.
It was supposed to “protect young people” and “curb addiction.”
You know, the usual slogans.
But there’s just one small problem:
Youth smoking didn’t go down. It went up.
The Numbers Are In. And They’re Embarrassing
According to new data from the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare (THL), Finland’s flavor ban failed – fast.
Here’s what happened between 2023 and 2024:
- Smoking among 14–18 year olds increased, especially among boys
- Daily nicotine pouch use dropped slightly
- But total nicotine use stayed the same — or even rose
- Many teens just switched back to cigarettes and illegal products
So let’s get this straight:
Finland banned flavors to protect kids.
Kids responded by smoking more.
And politicians are calling that a success?
This Isn’t Harm Reduction. It’s Harm Relocation.
Flavors aren’t the problem. They’re the solution.
They’re what makes safer nicotine alternatives appealing to smokers — both adults and teens trying to quit. Sweden knows this. That’s why it has:
- Legal flavored pouches
- The lowest youth smoking rate in Europe (3%)
- And 41% fewer tobacco-related cancers than the EU average
(Source)
What’s the Lesson?
If your policy drives people back to smoking, it’s not public health.
It’s political theater. And it costs lives.