HelloSynix devices draw attention for one reason. The lineup leans hard into a phone-style touch screen and Bluetooth features, while still living in the disposable category.
For this review, I used our VapePicks rubric. It focuses on reliability, labeling clarity, charging behavior, leak control, and day-to-day usability. Marcus Reed stress-checks power behavior. Jamal Davis focuses on carry and daily handling.
The core keyword for search intent here is hellosynix vape reviews. This article covers the two mainstream, widely listed SKUs under that brand name.

Product Overview
| Device | Pros | Cons | Ideal For | Price | Overall Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HelloSynix / Halo SYNIX 30000 (5%) | Screen + smart features stand out; adjustable airflow; multiple modes; strong published spec sheet | Feature-heavy for a disposable; more things to troubleshoot; larger carry footprint | Adults who want novelty features and an adjustable draw in a disposable | Often listed around 15 | 3.8 |
| HelloSynix 30K 0% (0mg) | Same hardware-style feature set; listed flavor options are clear; draw-activated simplicity | “0%” still needs careful labeling discipline; value depends on pricing swings | Adults who want the device experience with no nicotine | Commonly listed around 25 | 3.6 |
Testing Team Takeaways
I treated HelloSynix as a “feature stack first” brand. Under that kind of design, reliability matters more than hype. A big screen does not help if the device runs hot, drains fast, or leaks into the mouthpiece.
From Marcus Reed’s view, the biggest question sits around sustained output and heat behavior. He tends to distrust disposables with “boost” modes unless the airflow and coil setup keep pace. He flagged a practical concern: “Any time a disposable adds power modes, I assume the top mode will punish the coil first.” That is not a health claim. It is a durability habit from heavy use.
From Jamal Davis’s view, size and pocket comfort become the daily issue. A phone-like face and a large screen usually mean wider edges, more pressure points, and more chances for scratches. He kept coming back to this: “If it feels like a mini phone, it better carry like one too.” That comment sits squarely in his mobility lens.
From Dr. Adrian Walker’s view, the key risk is language discipline. Nicotine is addictive, and it is not for minors or non-users. Packaging and listings need to stay blunt. He also pushes one rule in every review: symptoms like persistent cough or chest pain belong in a clinic, not in device swapping.
HelloSynix Vapes Comparison Chart
| Spec / Trait | SYNIX 30000 (5%) | SYNIX 30K 0% (0mg) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Device type | Disposable (rechargeable) | Disposable (rechargeable) | |
| Nicotine options | 5% and also listed in 0% in some coverage | 0% (0mg) | |
| Activation | Draw-activated | Draw-activated | |
| Battery capacity | 1000 mAh | 1000 mAh | |
| Charging | USB-C | USB-C | |
| E-liquid capacity | 28 mL (commonly listed) | 28 mL | |
| Puff claim | Up to 30,000 (mode dependent in listings) | Up to 30,000 | |
| Modes | Normal / Smooth / Boost (listed) | Not always spelled out on every listing | |
| Coil | Dual mesh / “Dual Magic Mesh” wording appears | Dual Magic Mesh | |
| Airflow | Adjustable | Not always described as adjustable on every listing | |
| Screen | 3.5-inch touch screen (listed) | 3.5-inch touch screen (listed) | |
| “Smart” extras | Bluetooth functions are emphasized in listings and reviews | Same feature family is commonly advertised | |
| Build quality expectation | Mid, based on disposable category norms | Mid, based on disposable category norms | — |
| Ease of use expectation | Medium; features raise complexity | Medium; still feature heavy | — |
What We Tested and How We Tested It
This scoring uses a 5-point scale across nine metrics. Each score is anchored to verifiable product traits: spec clarity, control options, charging interface, coil claims, and consistency of published labeling. It also uses third-party reporting when it is specific about what the device does.
Flavor accuracy and throat hit are the hardest parts to score without direct inhale testing. For those, I used a conservative approach. I scored the system’s ability to support consistent flavor delivery, based on coil type claims, airflow control, and mode options. That keeps the rubric honest.
Battery life and charging behavior are scored from the published battery size plus the real-world expectation that screens and Bluetooth features increase drain. Leak and condensation control is scored from category behavior and mouthpiece design expectations, while staying cautious. None of this replaces medical advice. Nicotine exposure carries risk, and authoritative bodies treat e-cigarettes as not risk-free.
HelloSynix Vapes: Our Testing Experience
HelloSynix / Halo SYNIX 30000 (5%)

Our Testing Experience
HelloSynix positions the SYNIX 30000 as a disposable that behaves like a tiny phone. That concept changes how an adult user interacts with the device. A normal disposable asks for almost nothing. This one asks for attention. Listings describe Bluetooth features, on-screen tools, and multiple power modes.
From a practical view, I scored the SYNIX 30000 on two separate tracks. The first track is “does it vape in a stable way.” The second is “do the extra features stay out of the way.” For many adults, the second track decides whether the product feels fun or annoying.
Marcus’s heavy-use lens pushes one issue to the front: mode switching. The listing pattern describes Normal, Smooth, and Boost, with Boost tied to the lowest puff count. That implies higher output. Higher output usually amplifies coil stress. Under that kind of use, the device either stays consistent or it starts tasting rough earlier. Marcus’s stance is blunt: “Boost modes in disposables usually trade coil life for the first hour of excitement.” He treats that as a durability gamble, not as a health point.
Jamal’s carry lens focuses on the physical form. A large touch screen changes pocket comfort. It also changes scratch risk. It changes accidental taps. Even if it is draw-activated, a screen can wake up and drain. Jamal tends to notice little annoyances. A device that demands two hands, even once, stops feeling like a grab-and-go item. His shorthand was: “If I need to babysit it, it stops being an everyday carry.”
Where the SYNIX 30000 earns points is feature clarity. Multiple sources repeat the core specs: 1000 mAh battery, USB-C charging, 28 mL capacity, dual mesh wording, adjustable airflow, and a 3.5-inch touch screen. When a device has this many moving parts, consistency across listings matters.
Draw Experience & Flavors
Direct draw sensation depends on real inhale testing, coil saturation behavior, and how the device is used across days. I did not run inhale testing here. For this section, I’m covering what the flavor lineup suggests, and what adult users typically look for under those flavor names. I’m also listing what to watch for during real use.
A device with adjustable airflow and mode choices tends to land in the “tunable disposable” bucket. Under that kind of setup, a tighter airflow usually sharpens perceived throat hit for nicotine users. A more open airflow usually smooths it out, while pushing vapor volume. That is the trade space.
Berry Bliss appears in the lineup on the brand site and on the 0% options list. The name usually points toward mixed berry candy rather than tart fruit. Under that kind of profile, the quality test is simple: does it taste like berry skin and pulp, or does it collapse into generic sweetener. During real use, watch the aftertaste. Watch whether it turns perfumey after repeated pulls.
Black Cherry is listed for the 5% device on the brand site. This kind of flavor often swings between dark syrup and sharp cherry candy. The main failure mode is cough-drop territory, especially when cooling agents show up unexpectedly. If an adult user wants a heavier throat presence, Black Cherry sometimes feels denser. That is not a benefit claim. It’s a common preference pattern.
Blueberry Ice usually means blueberry candy plus a cooling agent. Cooling can feel clean for some users. It can also feel thin and “chemical cold” for others. In a device with power modes, a higher output setting can push the cooling sensation harder. That can reduce perceived sweetness. It can also increase throat scratch for some adults. Those are subjective reports, not medical advice.
Blueberry Mint is a risky blend. Mint can either read as crisp leaf or as toothpaste. Blueberry can either read as jam or as candy. In a dual-mesh disposable, the hope is separation. During real use, test this flavor right after a neutral profile. If the mint lingers too long, it will flatten the next flavor. That matters for adults who rotate devices.
Blueberry Watermelon is listed for both device families. This one tends to lean sweet. Watermelon flavors often read as candy rind rather than real fruit. Blueberry can provide a darker base note. The quality check is balance. If one side dominates, the mix becomes tiring. In practical terms, adults often like this profile on a tighter draw. It can keep the sweetness from feeling too airy.
Juicy Peach appears across listings. Peach profiles tend to be either fuzzy and soft or neon candy. Under longer use, peach can fade. It can also pick up a floral note. If an adult user wants a calmer profile, peach often works on lower output settings. That keeps it from tasting scorched. Again, that is a usage note, not a promise.
Mexican Mango is in both lists. Mango profiles often split into two camps: ripe mango flesh or bright mango candy. The device’s mode options matter here. A stronger mode can make mango feel sharper and more “top note.” A softer mode tends to keep it rounder. In real use, watch for “mango fatigue.” If the flavor leans artificial, it becomes obvious after repeated sessions.
If I had to pick one or two profiles that usually land well for adult nicotine users, Blueberry Watermelon tends to satisfy people who want sweetness, while Miami-style mints tend to satisfy people who want a cleaner finish. Miami Mint appears clearly in the 0% options list, even though it is not shown on the small 5% flavor snippet from the brand site.
Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Strong published spec clarity across multiple sources | Feature-heavy design raises failure points |
| Adjustable airflow and multiple modes are listed | Screen and Bluetooth features can increase battery drain |
| USB-C and 1000 mAh battery are widely stated | Pocket comfort may suffer due to size |
| Clear nicotine option labeling in third-party coverage | “Safe/enjoyable” marketing language needs skepticism |
KEY SPECS & FLAVORS:
- Price: commonly listed around 15 online
- Device Type: rechargeable disposable
- Nicotine Strength Options: 5% (50mg) is listed; 0% is also reported in coverage
- Activation Method: draw-activated
- Battery Capacity: 1000 mAh
- Charging Port and Estimated Charge Time: USB-C; charge time varies by charger and battery state
- Coil Type/Resistance: dual mesh / “Dual Magic Mesh” wording used in listings
- Tank/Pod Capacity: 28 mL (prefilled)
- Airflow Style and Adjustability: adjustable airflow listed on spec pages
- Modes: Normal / Smooth / Boost listed with different puff targets
- Display: 3.5-inch HD touch screen listed
- Connectivity: Bluetooth connection listed; “smart” functions are described in product pages and reviews
- Build Materials: not consistently stated across sources
- Dimensions and Weight: not consistently stated across sources
- Included Accessories: typically device only; some listings may include a cable, but it is not consistent
- Safety Features: overheat / short-circuit claims appear in brand marketing copy; treat as non-verified unless documented by a regulated filing
- Shipping: retailer dependent
- Flavor Range: multiple; see list below
Flavors shown directly on the brand’s sales page snippet: Berry Bliss, Black Cherry, Blueberry Ice, Blueberry Mint, Blueberry Watermelon, Juicy Peach, Mexican Mango.
Review Score
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 3.9 | Dual mesh wording plus adjustable airflow suggests strong delivery potential, but no direct inhale test here. |
| Throat Hit | 3.8 | Mode options and airflow control support tuning for adult preference; nicotine strength is clearly labeled in listings. |
| Vapor Production | 3.9 | Boost mode implies higher output capability; puff targets vary by mode. |
| Airflow/Draw | 4.1 | Adjustable airflow is explicitly listed on spec pages. |
| Battery Life | 3.5 | 1000 mAh is solid for a disposable, yet screen and Bluetooth features likely raise drain. |
| Leak Resistance | 3.6 | Disposable category baseline plus mouthpiece/condensation unknowns; no consistent anti-leak engineering details listed. |
| Build Quality | 3.7 | Feature density raises complexity; build materials are not consistently disclosed. |
| Ease of Use | 3.4 | Draw-activated helps, yet the UI feature set adds friction for some users. |
| Portability | 3.2 | Phone-style screen implies a larger footprint than a standard stick disposable. |
Overall Score: 3.8
HelloSynix 30K 0% (0mg)

Our Testing Experience
This SKU matters because it changes the target buyer. The device is still sold as a vape form factor, yet it is labeled as 0% nicotine. That shifts the conversation toward device feel, flavor profile expectations, and daily convenience, while removing nicotine delivery from the value proposition.
In practical evaluation, I treated it as “same chassis, different intent.” The published core specs match the 5% variant: 28 mL, 1000 mAh, USB-C, draw activation, dual mesh wording, and a 3.5-inch touch screen. That is a lot of hardware for a nicotine-free SKU, which means buyers are paying for the experience layer.
Marcus’s heavy-use angle changes here. Without nicotine, he cares less about throat hit “bite” and more about whether a sweet profile turns cloying. He tends to distrust sugar-forward flavors in high volume sessions. He put it like this: “If it’s all sweet top note, I’m done in a day.” That is a flavor fatigue comment, not a health claim.
Jamal’s daily carry angle stays consistent. The device still needs to fit the routine. A nicotine-free device that is bulky becomes even harder to justify for people who want low-maintenance carry. Jamal’s note was simple: “If it’s 0%, it should be the easiest thing in my pocket.” That is his convenience bias talking.
Where this SKU earns points is the clarity of listed options. One major retailer lists ten flavor options under the 0% product page, and they are easy to compare.
Draw Experience & Flavors
Again, draw feel and “in-mouth sensation” require direct inhale testing. I did not run inhale testing here. What I can do is map the flavor list into realistic expectation buckets, and list the checks that matter in real use.
Berry Bliss sits in the “mixed berry candy” family. Under 0% use, sweetness becomes the main driver. The quality check is balance and aftertaste. If the sweetener note sticks, it will feel tiring. A lower output setting, if present, usually helps sweet profiles feel less sharp.
Blueberry Ice is the classic “fruit + cooling” profile. Under 0% labeling, it becomes a clean palate option for adults who like a crisp finish. The main check is the cooling agent. If it tastes metallic or harsh, it ruins the concept. If it feels smooth, it becomes a reliable daily pick for many adults.
Blueberry Watermelon tends to lean bright and sweet. This one usually performs best when the blend feels layered. If it tastes like one flat candy, it becomes repetitive. The adult buyer should test it early in the day. Later sessions tend to expose flavor fatigue faster.
Juicy Peach sits in the “soft fruit” bucket. For many adult users, peach is a calmer profile. It often feels less sharp than citrus flavors. The check is whether it reads as peach flesh or floral candy. When it leans floral, it becomes polarizing.
Mexican Mango is the loud fruit profile in this list. Mango can taste rich, or it can taste like a neon syrup. Under 0% use, a syrupy mango can become too sweet fast. Adults who want a strong flavor impact often like mango. Adults who want something subtle often do not.
Miami Mint is the “reset” flavor. Mint profiles help clear sweetness. They also linger. Under real use, the check is how long the mint sticks in the mouth. If it lasts too long, it can spoil the next session, especially if the user rotates flavors.
Raspberry Peach Lime is the most complex blend on the list. This one can be excellent if the lime reads as real tartness. It can be harsh if the lime reads like cleaner. Adults who like sharper profiles usually start here. Adults who dislike citrus bite should avoid it.
Sour Apple Ice is usually green apple candy plus cooling. It often tastes brighter than blueberry ice. The check is “sour authenticity.” If it feels like a mild candy, it becomes boring. If it feels like sharp malic acid, it can feel aggressive. Individual tolerance varies.
Strawberry Kiwi is a classic sweet-tart mix. It often works as a middle-ground flavor. The check is whether the kiwi shows up at all. Many brands lean too heavy on strawberry.
Watermelon Ice is a straightforward profile. It tends to be clean at first. It can become one-note later. Under real use, it’s a good “baseline” flavor to test device consistency.
If a buyer wants the safest picks from a taste-preference angle, Blueberry Ice and Strawberry Kiwi are usually the least polarizing. For adults who want the strongest flavor punch, Mexican Mango and Sour Apple Ice are usually the first tests.
Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Clear 0% labeling and a visible list of flavor options | “0%” can attract misleading “wellness” framing in the market |
| Published core specs match the premium feature stack | Price swings widely across retailers |
| Rechargeable battery and USB-C are stated | Feature-heavy design can feel unnecessary for 0% users |
KEY SPECS & FLAVORS:
- Price: commonly listed around 25 online, varies by seller
- Device Type: rechargeable disposable
- Nicotine Strength Options: 0% (0mg)
- Activation Method: draw-activated
- Battery Capacity: 1000 mAh
- Charging Port and Estimated Charge Time: USB-C; time varies by charger
- Coil Type/Resistance: Dual Magic Mesh wording appears on listings
- Tank/Pod Capacity: 28 mL (prefilled)
- Airflow Style and Adjustability: not consistently stated on all 0% listings
- Display: 3.5-inch full touch screen listed
- Puff claim: up to 30,000
- Safety Features: not documented as a regulated claim; treat marketing language cautiously
- Flavor Range: listed options below
Flavors listed as available options: Berry Bliss, Blueberry Ice, Blueberry Watermelon, Juicy Peach, Mexican Mango, Miami Mint, Raspberry Peach Lime, Sour Apple Ice, Strawberry Kiwi, Watermelon Ice.
Review Score
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 3.7 | Strong flavor variety is listed; delivery depends on coil behavior and airflow, which are not fully disclosed here. |
| Throat Hit | 3.2 | With 0mg nicotine, “hit” becomes mostly airflow and cooling-agent feel; user preference varies widely. |
| Vapor Production | 3.7 | Coil and capacity specs suggest solid output; still a disposable baseline. |
| Airflow/Draw | 3.8 | Device family often lists adjustable airflow, though not every 0% listing repeats it. |
| Battery Life | 3.4 | Same 1000 mAh battery, same screen-style overhead expectation. |
| Leak Resistance | 3.6 | No consistent anti-leak design notes; treat as average. |
| Build Quality | 3.6 | Feature density still raises complexity; materials and durability details are thin. |
| Ease of Use | 3.5 | Draw activation helps; choosing features can still add friction. |
| Portability | 3.2 | Screen-style form factor remains the same carry trade-off. |
Overall Score: 3.6
Compare Performance Scores of These Vapes
| Device | Overall Score | Flavor | Throat Hit | Vapor Production | Airflow/Draw | Battery Life | Leak Resistance | Build Quality/Durability | Ease of Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SYNIX 30000 (5%) | 3.8 | 3.9 | 3.8 | 3.9 | 4.1 | 3.5 | 3.6 | 3.7 | 3.4 |
| SYNIX 30K 0% | 3.6 | 3.7 | 3.2 | 3.7 | 3.8 | 3.4 | 3.6 | 3.6 | 3.5 |
The 5% SYNIX 30000 looks more balanced on draw tuning. That comes from airflow and mode claims.
The 0% device trades throat-hit intensity for a broader “flavor routine” use case. That’s a design fit issue, not a performance win.
Best Picks
-
Best hellosynix vape for adjustable draw: SYNIX 30000 (5%)
Airflow adjustment and mode structure make it the better tuning pick. The score edge shows up in Airflow/Draw and Throat Hit. -
Best hellosynix vape for nicotine-free routine: SYNIX 30K 0%
The listed flavor options are clear, and the overall usability score stays close. It fits adults who want 0mg labeling.
How to Choose the hellosynix vape
Device choice here starts with intent. One SKU is built around nicotine delivery. The other is not. That single fact changes the entire “value” calculation.
MTL vs DL preference still matters. A tighter draw usually feels closer to cigarette-style pull. A more open draw usually feels airier and cloudier. If an adult user hates airy pulls, the model with explicit airflow adjustment claims becomes safer to pick.
Battery needs matter under real life. A 1000 mAh battery is respectable, yet screens and Bluetooth features are overhead. For commuters, that overhead can decide whether the device makes it through the day.
Maintenance preference is simple here. These are disposables. There is no coil swap. There is no refill cycle. That helps beginners. It also limits control for advanced users.
Practical matching, based on this review’s device fit:
An adult user who wants a stronger nicotine-forward feel should pick SYNIX 30000 (5%). Airflow and mode claims give more tuning range.
An adult user who wants 0mg should pick SYNIX 30K 0%. The flavor list is clearly posted, and the spec sheet is straightforward.
A commuter who hates fuss should still think twice. The screen form factor can be annoying. A simpler disposable can fit better, even outside HelloSynix.
Limitations
HelloSynix does not look like a broad device ecosystem. Public listings and third-party brand pages mostly point to the SYNIX 30000 family. That limits choice. It also means buyers who dislike the form factor have nowhere to go inside the brand.
The second limitation is category-driven. Disposable devices do not offer rebuildable control. They do not offer precise wattage tuning. They do not offer deep airflow engineering like a serious tank. Adults who want high-wattage cloud chasing will not get it here.
The third limitation is feature density. Screens and Bluetooth functions are novelty for some. They are clutter for others. Under daily use, novelty fades. Practical reliability stays. Any extra feature that wakes the screen or drains the battery lowers perceived value.
The fourth limitation is pricing volatility. Some sellers list the device near typical disposable prices. Others list it much higher. When pricing climbs, the value argument becomes fragile.
Finally, nicotine risk remains real. Even strong-performing devices are for adults only. Nicotine is addictive. E-cigarettes are not risk-free.
Is the hellosynix vape lineup worth it?
HelloSynix looks like a niche play. The SYNIX 30000 is built around a screen and Bluetooth features. That is the brand’s main hook. Third-party coverage describes it as a disposable with smartphone-like functions. That matches retailer spec pages.
Value depends on the buyer’s tolerance for gimmicks. Some adults want a disposable that does one job. Those users will not like this. The device asks for attention. A big touch screen changes how it carries. It changes how it feels in hand. It can also change battery drain patterns. A 1000 mAh battery helps, yet screens still cost power.
Flavor value is harder to call without inhale testing. The device claims dual mesh style coils. It also claims 28 mL capacity. Those specs suggest stable output potential. The mode system suggests the user can trade intensity for longevity. That is a normal design bargain in modern disposables.
From the perspective of reliability, the lineup sits in the middle. A feature-heavy disposable has more parts that can annoy users. A simpler device has fewer surprises. Buyers who like tinkering may enjoy a phone-style UI. Buyers who want calm routines may hate it. That is the real split.
The 0% SKU complicates the value story. It sells the same feature stack without nicotine. That can be worth it for adults who want 0mg labeling. It can also feel pointless for adults who just want a basic flavored device. The retailer flavor list is a plus here. It is specific. It is easy to compare.
Cost decides the final answer. When the device is priced like a normal disposable, the novelty can feel acceptable. When it is priced like a premium refillable, the argument collapses. A disposable still ends. A refillable can run for months. Under that comparison, HelloSynix must stay cheap to feel rational.
Nicotine remains a separate issue. Adult nicotine users should treat it seriously. Authoritative sources describe nicotine as highly addictive. They also treat e-cigarettes as not risk-free. That does not stop adults from buying devices. It frames the decision as informed, not romantic.
Pro Tips for hellosynix vape
- Keep screen brightness low, if settings allow. Battery lasts longer.
- Use a stable USB-C charger. Avoid random high-output bricks.
- Wipe the mouthpiece daily. Condensation builds in most disposables.
- Do not leave the device in a hot car. Battery safety basics still apply.
- If the draw feels tight, adjust airflow first before changing how hard you pull.
- Rotate sweet flavors with mint or cooler profiles. Flavor fatigue drops.
- Charge before the battery hits zero. Many devices behave worse at very low charge.
- Store upright when possible. It reduces pooling near the mouthpiece.
- Treat puff counts as marketing. Use them as a rough ceiling only.
FAQs
1) How long does a HelloSynix 30K device last in real use?
Puff counts are not a real calendar. Mode selection changes output, and output changes consumption. Listings explicitly tie different modes to different puff targets.
2) Does the SYNIX 30000 have adjustable airflow?
Many spec pages and brand copy list adjustable airflow. Not every seller repeats it.
3) What nicotine strengths are sold for the SYNIX 30000 family?
Coverage and listings show 5% and also 0% versions. Specific availability depends on the seller.
4) How fast does it charge?
USB-C is consistently listed. Charge time depends on charger output and battery state. A screen-heavy device can also consume power while charging.
5) Do these devices leak a lot?
No source here provides a verified leak-prevention design. Treat leak control as average for the category. Store upright and keep the mouthpiece clean.
6) How do I pick a flavor if I hate “ice” cooling?
Avoid flavors with “Ice” in the name. Start with Berry Bliss, Juicy Peach, or Strawberry Kiwi. Those options are explicitly listed for the 0% SKU.
7) Is 0% nicotine “safe”?
“0%” only means no nicotine. It does not equal risk-free. WHO and FDA materials treat e-cigarette aerosol exposure as a health topic and emphasize caution.
8) Are these devices meant for beginners?
They are draw-activated, which helps beginners. The screen and Bluetooth extras add complexity. Some beginners will like that. Others will not.
Sources
- CDC. Health Effects of Vaping. 2025. https://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/e-cigarettes/health-effects.html
- U.S. FDA. E-Cigarettes, Vapes, and other Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENDS). 2025. https://www.fda.gov/tobacco-products/products-ingredients-components/e-cigarettes-vapes-and-other-electronic-nicotine-delivery-systems-ends
- U.S. FDA. Nicotine Is Why Tobacco Products Are Addictive. 2025. https://www.fda.gov/tobacco-products/health-effects-tobacco-use/nicotine-why-tobacco-products-are-addictive
- World Health Organization. Regulation of e-cigarettes (tobacco factsheet). 2024. https://www.who.int/docs/librariesprovider2/default-document-library/10-regulation-of-e-cigarettes-tobacco-factsheet-2024.pdf
- National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. Public Health Consequences of E-Cigarettes. 2018. https://www.nationalacademies.org/projects/HMD-BPH-16-02/publication/24952
About the Author: Chris Miller