Innokin Endura T22 Pro Review

Innokin’s Endura T22 Pro is a beginner-friendly, low-wattage MTL starter kit built around a big battery and simple power steps, typically sitting around the mid-$40s (I found it listed at $44.99). It’s strong on battery stamina and “set-and-go” usability, weaker on pocketability and power range, and it fits commuters and low-fuss daily users far better than cloud chasers or tinkerers.

Product Overview

Device Overall Score Pros Cons Ideal For
Innokin Endura T22 Pro 4.3/5 All-day battery feel, simple wattage steps, smooth MTL with a forgiving coil Bulky for a “starter,” limited power ceiling, not a DL/cloud device Newer vapers, MTL draw fans, workday/commute use

Final Verdict

If you want an uncomplicated MTL kit that prioritizes battery endurance and predictable output over customization, the Endura T22 Pro is easy to live with. Its 4-step wattage system stays within a tight, beginner-appropriate range, and the overall feel is steady and low-drama for day-to-day nicotine use. The trade-off is size (it’s more “bag carry” than “shirt pocket”) and a ceiling that won’t satisfy anyone chasing warm, dense DL pulls.

  • Who It’s For

    • Adults who want a simple MTL kit with minimal settings
    • Commuters who hate mid-day charging anxiety
    • Users who prefer a tighter draw and consistent, modest vapor
  • Who It’s Not For

    • DL vapers who want big airflow and dense clouds
    • Tweakers who want precise watt control and wide coil options
    • Minimalists who only carry truly pocket-sized gear
Innokin Endura T22 Pro

Test Method

We tested Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability across a week of normal routines: commuting, desk work breaks, errands, and evening sessions. We rotated wattage steps, tracked charge cycles and heat behavior, and checked the tank base/mouthpiece for condensation after pocket and bag carry. Vape and nicotine products are for adults only; use is not recommended for minors, pregnant people, or people who don’t use nicotine, and our notes are subjective—not medical advice.

Real-World Use

Day one, I treated it like a true starter kit: fill, prime, keep it simple. I waited the full 5 minutes after filling before taking the first pull, then started at 9.5W to get a baseline for how the coil “speaks” when it’s cool and new. The draw landed where I wanted it for MTL—noticeably restricted, with a soft, cushiony inhale that doesn’t feel scratchy when you keep your cadence steady. At 11W, flavor felt cleaner and more layered; at 12.5W, the warmth came up a notch and the throat hit tightened. 13.5W was the “busy day” setting—still controlled, but it exposed shortcuts fast if the wick wasn’t fully saturated.

Marcus pushed it harder than I did: longer chains on the top setting during outdoor walks, watching for heat spikes and that early warning “paper-dry” note when the coil starts to outrun the wicking. Jamal treated it like an everyday carry brick—bag tosses, quick pulls between tasks, and lots of stops/starts where devices can get finicky. The bottom master switch was the quiet hero here; pocket/bag carry felt less stressful because I could hard-off the device.

  • What we liked

    • Consistent MTL pull that stays comfortable across the wattage steps
    • Battery behavior felt steady with no weird dips or hot charging moments
    • Simple controls that don’t punish beginners for “wrong” settings
  • Who it is best for

    • Adults who prefer MTL and want a predictable throat hit
    • People who vape in short sessions all day (commute/work/errands)
    • Users who value reliability over customization
  • Where it falls short

    • Too chunky for anyone who demands ultra-pocket carry
    • Power range is intentionally narrow; it won’t satisfy DL expectations
    • Condensation management still matters if you chain or overfill
Innokin Endura T22 Pro

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
Steady MTL flavor delivery
Strong battery stamina feel for low-watt use
Simple 4-step wattage selection
Dedicated master on/off reduces pocket misfire risk
Beginner-friendly refillable tank workflow
Bulky footprint compared with modern pod systems
Limited wattage ceiling; not for DL/cloud use
Condensation can build if you chain or ignore wipe-downs
Coil performance drops fast if you under-prime or run low juice

Details

  • Price: $44.99
  • Device type: Refillable MTL starter kit (battery + tank)
  • Battery: Internal 3000mAh
  • Power: 4 preset levels (9.5W / 11W / 12.5W / 13.5W)
  • Tank capacity: 4.5mL (standard version)
  • Coil: Prism T18 1.5Ω (Kanthal), compatible with T18 coils
  • Charging: USB-C, 5V/2A; observed full charge time about 1 hr 45 min (our timer)
  • Size: 79 × 34.8 × 25.8mm (device only); 135 × 34.8 × 25.8mm (with tank)
Innokin Endura T22 Pro

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.4 Clean, consistent MTL flavor at 11–12.5W
Throat Hit 4.3 Predictable; tightens up at 12.5–13.5W
Vapor Production 3.9 Appropriate for MTL, modest ceiling by design
Airflow/Draw 4.2 Comfortably restricted; good “cig-style” pacing
Battery Life 4.7 3000mAh feels like a true all-day buffer at low watts
Leak Resistance 4.1 No major leaks, but condensation needs routine wipe-down
Build Quality 4.4 Sturdy body; controls feel deliberate and reliable
Ease of Use 4.6 Simple wattage steps and a master switch reduce mistakes
Portability 4.1 Carryable, but chunky versus modern pods
Overall 4.3 Best suited to low-fuss MTL daily use

Choosing the Endura T22 Pro

Buy it if you want a refillable MTL kit with no menu learning curve and you value battery headroom more than pocket size. The key trade-offs are simple: MTL comfort and reliability vs. limited power and a larger footprint. If you chain frequently, you’ll do better staying mid-level so the coil keeps up; if you take short, spaced pulls, higher steps feel warmer and punchier.

If you want a smaller, pocket-first daily carry, look at the Vaporesso XROS 4. If you want a similarly straightforward MTL experience with a different form factor and wide availability, the Uwell Caliburn G3 line is a common “easy recommendation.”

Innokin Endura T22 Pro

Limitations

The Endura T22 Pro’s strengths come from its constraints, and you’ll feel that quickly if your preferences don’t match the design.

  • Narrow wattage range limits experimentation
  • Bulkier than most modern pod-style daily carries
  • Coil demands good priming and reasonable pacing for best flavor

Endura T22 Pro vs Others

  • Why choose these models

    • You want preset wattage steps instead of a full menu
    • You prioritize battery endurance in low-watt MTL use
    • You like a master on/off for bag carry confidence
  • Alternatives to consider

    • Vaporesso XROS 4: smaller carry, simple pods, very commuter-friendly
    • Uwell Caliburn G3: easy daily use with broad pod availability
    • Aspire Nautilus Prime X: more adjustability if you want to tinker

Pro Tips for Endura T22 Pro

  • Prime new coils patiently; don’t rush the first session after filling.
  • Start at 9.5W for the first tank on a fresh coil, then step up if needed.
  • Keep the tank comfortably above “low” to avoid dry, papery hits late in the fill.
  • Wipe the mouthpiece and tank base daily to keep condensation from building up.
  • Use a steady MTL cadence (short draw, pause, repeat) instead of rapid chaining.
  • If flavor dulls suddenly, check coil seating and clean the 510 connection area.
  • Keep the master switch off in bags or pockets for peace of mind.
  • Charge with a quality USB-C cable and avoid heat-trapping surfaces during charging.
  • If the throat hit feels sharp, drop a wattage step and slow your draw slightly.
  • Replace the coil when flavor drops or a burnt note appears—don’t “push through it.”

FAQs

Is the Endura T22 Pro MTL or DL?

It’s an MTL-leaning kit with a restricted draw and modest vapor output that feels best with cigarette-style inhales.

Which wattage setting felt best in testing?

I spent most time at 11W and 12.5W for a balance of warmth and clean flavor; 13.5W was best for short, spaced sessions.

Does it leak easily?

Not in a dramatic way, but condensation can collect—regular wipe-downs and avoiding overfilling make a noticeable difference.

How long does the battery last?

For low-watt MTL use, it consistently felt like an all-day device; my heavier days still cleared a full workday without stress.

About the Author: Chris Miller

Chris Miller is the lead reviewer and primary author at VapePicks. He coordinates the site’s hands-on testing process and writes the final verdicts that appear in each review. His background comes from long-term work in consumer electronics, where day-to-day reliability matters more than launch-day impressions. That approach carries into nicotine-device coverage, with a focus on build quality, device consistency, and the practical details that show up after a device has been carried and used for several days.

In testing, Chris concentrates on battery behavior and charging stability, especially signs like abnormal heat, fast drain, or uneven output. He also tracks leaking, condensate buildup, and mouthpiece hygiene in normal routines such as commuting, short work breaks, and longer evening sessions. When a device includes draw activation or button firing, he watches for misfires and inconsistent triggering. Flavor and throat hit notes are treated as subjective experience, recorded for context, and separated from health interpretation.

Chris works with the fixed VapePicks testing team, which includes a high-intensity tester for stress and heat checks, plus an everyday-carry tester who focuses on portability and pocket reliability. For safety context, VapePicks relies on established public guidance and a clinical advisor’s limited review of risk language, rather than personal medical recommendations.

VapePicks content is written for adults. Nicotine is highly addictive, and e-cigarettes are not for youth, pregnant individuals, or people who do not already use nicotine products.