Despite some initial confusion, adult Australian vapers can legally purchase nicotine e-liquids from online pharmacies, though a prescription is required. Earlier advice from the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) and the Pharmaceutical Society of Australia (PSA) incorrectly stated that online sales of vaping products would be banned from October 1, 2024, only allowing in-person sales. However, a closer review of federal regulations clarified that online sales are legal with a valid prescription.
To this effect, several online pharmacies now offer nicotine e-liquids, including various vape devices and nicotine refills, though only in limited flavours (tobacco, mint, menthol, and unflavored). Customers must upload prescriptions and register on these sites to view products, which are typically shipped via registered post.
For nicotine e-liquids over 20mg/mL (Schedule 4), prescriptions are mandatory, and some pharmacies provide them for free or at a low cost if purchasing through their platform, while devices and accessories can be bought without a prescription. While nicotine concentrations of 20mg/mL or less (Schedule 3) can be bought without a prescription but are subject to significant restrictions, including state-level bans and mandatory pharmacist consultations, limiting their online availability.
However, online sales have also faced barriers, with only one of 10 online pharmacies selling low-nicotine vapes without a prescription, and finding the ones which do is difficult due to restrictions. Moreover, issues like the need for comprehensive pharmacist consultations and local regulations in states like New South Wales and the ACT, where vapes must be handed directly to customers, are further limiting online access.
The new restrictions are benefitting anything but public health
Ultimately as predicted, these failed regulations seem to be benefitting solely the local ever expanding black market. “The current regulations are denying Australia’s smokers access to the most popular and most effective quitting aid. Some vapers are returning to smoking but most will continue to access unregulated products from the black market. The black market has fuelled increasing criminal activity and is the main cause of the increase in youth vaping,” reiterated a concerned Mendelsohn.
“The only way to stop a black market is to replace it with a legal, regulated one. Vapes should be sold as adult consumer products from licensed retail outlets with strict age verification, like cigarettes and alcohol, as they are in other Western countries,” he concluded.
A Clearer Picture of the Vape Regulations Coming Ahead for Australia