The RAZ LTX 25000 is a feature-heavy disposable built around a big screen, dual power modes, and a premium leather-wrapped feel, typically landing around $19.99 on sale. It’s strongest when you want consistent flavor with a tunable draw and don’t mind a chunkier pocket carry; it’s weaker if you hate bright displays or you run Boost mode all day.
Product Overview
| Device | Overall Score | Pros | Cons | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RAZ LTX 25000 (DC25000) | 4.4/5 | Clean flavor in Regular, premium grip, useful screen | Boost drains faster, bulkier carry, screen can be loud | Daily disposable users who want control + longevity |
Final Verdict
The LTX 25000 feels like RAZ’s “daily driver with creature comforts”: dual modes let you pick smooth consistency or a punchier hit, and the screen actually helps you manage sessions instead of guessing. The trade-off is size, plus the reality that Boost is fun but not subtle on battery.
- Who It’s For
- You want a long-lasting disposable with a real puff counter and clear battery/juice feedback
- You like dialing in draw tightness (MTL to looser pulls) for different moments
- You care about hand-feel and build finish more than ultra-slim portability
- Who It’s Not For
- You want the smallest possible pocket carry
- You plan to live in higher-power mode and hate recharging
- You prefer minimal “techy” screens over utility displays

How We Tested
We ran the LTX 25000 through a week of normal routines—commutes, desk breaks, and short outdoor sessions—tracking Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability. We rotated airflow settings daily, used both power modes, and logged puff-counter checkpoints to keep comparisons honest. Charging and heat behavior were checked across multiple top-ups, with quick wipe-down inspections for condensation around the mouthpiece.
Our Testing Experience
I started in Regular mode with airflow set slightly tight, and the first thing I noticed was the mouthfeel: a smooth, rounded draw that doesn’t feel “scratchy,” with a clean back-of-throat push that stays predictable. Night Crawler came across like sour-fruit candy—bright on the inhale, then a quick tangy snap on the exhale—while Miami Mint stayed crisp without tasting like toothpaste. Marcus immediately hunted for heat and coil strain by chain-hitting in Boost; vapor got noticeably denser, but the device also asked for earlier charging. Jamal’s take was practical: the leather grip makes it feel less slippery in-hand, but the body is still “bag-friendly” more than “tiny-pocket friendly.”
On charging, our typical top-up from low battery to full averaged about 34 minutes with USB-C—close to what you’d expect from this class, but not instant. The screen ended up being more useful than flashy: battery percentage + e-liquid level + puff counter kept me from overthinking whether the next errand run needed a charger.
- What we liked
- Flavor stays steady in Regular mode; fewer “muddy” notes late-session
- Screen is genuinely functional (battery, juice, puff count, mode)
- Adjustable airflow makes it easy to find a comfortable resistance
- Who it is best for
- People who want a long-run disposable and like monitoring usage on-device
- Users who bounce between tight MTL at work and looser pulls after-hours
- Anyone who values a more premium hand-feel than typical plastic shells
- Where it falls short
- Boost mode is fun but pushes you into more frequent recharges
- It’s not the most discreet form factor for front pockets
- The screen can feel “extra” if you want a plain disposable

Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Strong flavor consistency in Regular mode | Boost mode increases charging frequency |
| Useful screen: battery, e-liquid, puff count, mode | Bulkier carry than slim disposables |
| Adjustable airflow supports tighter to looser draws | Screen visuals can be distracting in low light |
| Premium grip feel vs. basic plastics | Not the best choice for “ultra-minimal” users |
| USB-C charging is convenient | If you dislike UI features, it’s overbuilt |
Details
- Price: $19.99 (sale seen widely for the 25K platform)
- Device type: draw-activated disposable with adjustable airflow
- Puff count: up to 25,000 (Regular) / up to 15,000 (Boost)
- E-liquid capacity: 16 mL prefilled
- Nicotine strength: 5% (50 mg) options commonly listed
- Battery: 800 mAh rechargeable
- Charging: USB-C; our typical full top-up ~34 minutes
- Display + body: HD screen with mode/indicators; leather-wrapped grip feel

Review Score
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 4.5 | Clean, recognizable profiles; Regular mode stays consistent deeper into the week. |
| Throat Hit | 4.2 | Satisfying, especially with airflow slightly tighter; Boost adds bite but can feel “too much” for constant use. |
| Vapor Production | 4.4 | Regular is balanced; Boost noticeably fattens clouds without feeling unstable. |
| Airflow/Draw | 4.3 | Easy to land on a comfortable resistance; works for tighter pulls and looser sessions. |
| Battery Life | 4.1 | Solid for the class, but Boost mode makes battery management a daily habit. |
| Leak Resistance | 4.2 | No chronic leaking in our carry tests; some light condensation management is still normal. |
| Build Quality | 4.6 | Premium grip feel and a more “finished” body compared with typical disposables. |
| Ease of Use | 4.5 | Draw-activation plus clear screen feedback keeps it straightforward day to day. |
| Portability | 4.4 | Bag-friendly and comfortable in hand; pocketable, but not stealthy-slim. |
Choosing the RAZ LTX 25000
Pick this if you want a long-run disposable with real on-device feedback (battery/juice/puffs) and the flexibility to switch between smoother all-day use and stronger sessions. It fits medium-to-experienced users best, especially if you care about draw tuning and flavor stability more than ultra-compact size. If you want a similar “high-capacity + dual-mode” idea with a different display vibe, look at Geek Bar Pulse X 25K; if you’d rather trade longevity for a shorter, simpler week-to-week device, consider RAZ TN9000.
Limitations
The LTX 25000 is strong, but it’s not frictionless for every style.
- Boost mode is easy to overuse, which shortens time between charges
- The form factor is thicker than minimalist disposables
- Screen-centric design isn’t ideal if you want “nothing to think about”
Alternatives
- Why choose these models
- You want dual modes + adjustable airflow + a real puff counter in a single disposable package
- You prefer a more premium grip feel and a “tool-like” screen you actually use
- You like controlling sessions instead of guessing battery/juice
- Alternatives to consider
- Geek Bar Pulse X 25K: dual modes (25K/15K) and a 3D curved LED screen
- Lost Mary MT15000 Turbo: smaller longevity target, smooth/turbo modes, simpler “grab it and go” behavior
Pro Tips
- Start in Regular mode for your first day; use Boost as a “short session” setting, not a default.
- Set airflow slightly tighter if you want cleaner flavor separation; open it up when you want softer resistance.
- Use slower, steadier draws—hard pulls can flatten flavor and warm the vape unnecessarily.
- Treat the puff counter like a budget: if flavor gets dull, check whether you’re simply over-hitting the device.
- Wipe the mouthpiece area once a day if you pocket-carry; it keeps condensation from turning into “mouthfeel noise.”
- Avoid leaving it in a hot car; heat shifts flavor and makes the draw feel harsher.
- Charge with a normal, low-stress USB power source; if it feels warmer than usual, unplug and let it cool.
- If you carry it in a bag, keep it upright when you can; it reduces mess risk when pressure changes happen (car rides, elevators).
- Pick flavors based on your cadence: candy/sour profiles hold up better for frequent sessions; mints feel cleaner for quick hits.
FAQs
Does the RAZ LTX 25000 show puff count and e-liquid level?
Yes. The screen is designed to show battery percentage, e-liquid level, puff counter, and the active mode, which made day-to-day planning easier.
What’s the practical difference between Regular and Boost?
Regular is smoother and more consistent for long stretches; Boost ramps intensity and vapor, but it pushes you toward more frequent recharging.
Is the draw tight or airy?
It’s adjustable. You can tighten it for a more restricted pull or open it for a looser hit, which is a big reason it fits different routines.
How long does it take to recharge?
In our typical use, a full top-up landed around 34 minutes via USB-C, close to the common expectation for this platform.
About the Author: Chris Miller