The Beri Crush 50K Disposable is a high-capacity, rechargeable 5% nicotine disposable that sells around $18.99, pairing a 20 mL prefill and a punchy 40W Crush Mode with a big screen and adjustable airflow—great for adults who want long-run, flavor-forward MTL sessions and occasional dense clouds, but less ideal if you need a slim pocket vape, lower nicotine options, or all-day 40W use.
Product Overview
| Device | Overall Score | Pros | Cons | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beri Crush 50K Disposable | 4.2/5 | Two modes; bold flavor; screen + airflow control | Bulky; 40W drains faster | Long-run MTL with occasional boost |
Final Verdict
After a week of rotation, the Beri Crush 50K Disposable landed for us as a feature-heavy, long-run disposable that’s happiest in Normal Mode: clean, sweet-leaning flavor and a consistent draw, with Crush Mode as a “turn it up” button for short bursts. The trade-offs are size and a noticeable battery hit when you live at 40W.
Who It’s For
- Adults who want one disposable to last many days
- MTL vapers who like adjustable restriction
- Flavor-first users who want a quick 40W boost
Who It’s Not For
- Anyone who needs a slim, pocket-stealth device
- Users who prefer lower nicotine than 5%
- People who plan to run max output all day
Nicotine vapes are for adults only; avoid use if you’re underage, pregnant, or not a nicotine user, and our impressions are subjective—not medical advice.

How We Tested It
Over seven days, we rotated the Beri Crush 50K through commute pockets, desk breaks, and evening sessions, tracking daily puff counts and recharges. We scored Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability. I logged charging behavior (heat, speed, stability) while Marcus pushed long, high-output sessions and Jamal focused on grab-and-go pocket carry. We also checked the mouthpiece for condensation and kept notes on draw consistency across both modes.
Our Testing Experience
I started in Normal Mode on a morning drive with the airflow half-closed; the draw felt like a tight MTL pull, and the first puffs carried a dense sweetness—no thinness, just warm vapor that lingered before the throat hit showed up. On our meter, Normal Mode hovered around 16–24W and stayed stable even when I chain-hit it on a break.
Flip to Crush Mode and the button pushes about 39–40W: thicker mouthfeel, sharper hit, and more cooling bite on flavors like Polar Ice. Marcus loved the surge but had to recharge midday when he leaned on Crush Mode, while Jamal kept it in Normal Mode and got about a day per charge in commuter-style use. On a 20W USB-C brick, my unit went from ~10% to ~80% in 17 minutes and hit full in about 24 minutes.
What we liked
- Dense flavor and stable output in Normal Mode
- Airflow range for tight-to-mid MTL
- Screen makes tracking simple
Who it is best for
- MTL users who want a boost button
- Heavy daily users who hate swapping devices
- Fans of sweet, punchy fruit blends
Where it falls short
- Bulky in a front pocket
- 40W use drains fast
- Mouthpiece condensation needs wipes

Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Bold flavor in Normal Mode | Bigger body isn’t pocket-stealth |
| Crush Mode delivers a real boost | 40W use forces more recharges |
| Adjustable airflow has real range | Only 5% nicotine option |
| Screen simplifies day-to-day tracking | Condensation can build at the mouthpiece |
Details
- Price (single, on sale): $18.99
- Device type: Rechargeable disposable; draw-activated with a button for Crush Mode
- E-liquid capacity: 20 mL prefilled
- Battery: 1000 mAh rechargeable via USB-C; my unit averaged ~17 min to ~80% and ~24 min to full on a 20W adapter
- Puff rating: Up to 50,000 (Normal Mode) / ~25,000 (Crush Mode)
- Nicotine strength: 5% (50 mg)
- Output/modes: Normal Mode 15–25W auto-adaptive; Crush Mode up to 40W (button-activated)
- Coil/controls: Mesh heating with a quad-coil architecture; adjustable airflow; 1.77-inch HD display

Review Score
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 4.4 | Bold, accurate fruit profiles; minimal fade in Normal Mode |
| Throat Hit | 4.3 | Smooth in Normal, sharper in Crush without feeling “spiky” |
| Vapor Production | 4.2 | Satisfying density; Crush Mode gets genuinely cloudy |
| Airflow/Draw | 4.2 | Useful adjustability; best as tight-to-mid MTL |
| Battery Life | 4.1 | Solid in Normal; 40W use demands frequent top-offs |
| Leak Resistance | 4.0 | No leaks, but mouthpiece condensation needs wiping |
| Build Quality | 4.2 | Stable firing and consistent output across days |
| Ease of Use | 4.5 | Clear screen, simple modes, no setup friction |
| Portability | 3.8 | Bigger than most disposables; noticeable in pockets |
| Overall | 4.2 | Feature-rich long-run disposable with a real boost mode |
How to Choose the Beri Crush 50K Disposable
Start with three questions: (1) do you vape enough to justify a long-run device, (2) will you actually use a 40W burst, and (3) how much pocket bulk will you tolerate. If you’re an MTL user who vapes all day and hates swapping devices, the Beri Crush 50K makes sense—keep it in Normal Mode for steadier flavor, better battery behavior, and a cleaner mouthfeel. If you’re sensitive to strong nicotine or prefer a milder hit, look elsewhere because it’s typically offered at 5%.
For common alternatives by scenario: pocket carry with strong flavor—Geek Bar Pulse X 25K; smoother everyday MTL with less “brick” feel—Lost Mary MT35000.

Limitations
Most of my complaints came from living with it all day, not from the core performance.
- Crush Mode is fun but punishes battery life
- Bigger chassis reduces pocket comfort
- Sweet-leaning profiles can fatigue the palate
- Condensation is manageable, but it’s real
Beri Crush 50K Disposable vs Alternatives
Why choose these models
- Two-mode behavior that feels meaningfully different
- Screen + airflow control make it easy to manage
- Long-run capacity for heavy users who hate refills
Alternatives to consider
- Geek Bar Pulse X 25K: easier pocket carry; strong flavor variety
- Lost Mary MT35000: smoother everyday draw; lighter carry feel
- YUMI P20000: ice-level control if cooling intensity is your priority

Pro Tips for the Beri Crush 50K Disposable
- Start in Normal Mode; treat Crush Mode as short “bursts,” not your default
- Keep airflow slightly restricted for cleaner flavor and less mouthpiece moisture
- Wipe the mouthpiece daily (and after pocket carry) to control condensation
- Recharge before it fully dies; low battery hits feel noticeably weaker at higher output
- Use a basic USB-C wall adapter; if the device warms, switch to a lower-output charger
- Don’t leave it in a hot car—heat thins liquid and makes condensation worse
- Store it upright when possible, especially overnight
- If flavor dulls, tighten airflow and shorten puffs instead of cranking Crush Mode
- Watch the screen’s puff/battery indicators so you don’t push it into the “end-of-liquid” zone
FAQs
Does Crush Mode make the flavor better?
It can intensify sweetness and cooling, but it also sharpens the throat hit and can make some blends feel louder than they need to.
Is this more MTL or DL?
It’s primarily MTL with adjustable restriction; fully open airflow can feel airy, but the device still performs best with a tighter draw.
Does it leak in pockets?
Mine didn’t leak, but it will build condensation at the mouthpiece if it stays warm in a pocket—wipe it and you’re fine.
About the Author: Chris Miller