How High are Vapor Taxes in Your State?

Vapor products have been growing in popularity since they entered the market in 2007, and taxation on such items has been following suit. Many states may also be looking toward vapor and other excise taxes to fill budget holes caused by the coronavirus crisis. While those areas may represent untapped revenue sources for many states, taxing those activities is unlikely to raise much revenue in the short term.

Vapor products can deliver nicotine, the addictive component of cigarettes, without the combustion and inhalation of tar that is a part of smoking cigarettes and are thus thought to be considerably less harmful than conventional cigarettes. Vapor products and cigarettes can be economic substitutes. That means high excise taxes on harm-reducing vapor products risk harming public health by pushing vapers to go back to smoking. A recent publication found that 32,400 smokers in Minnesota were deterred from quitting cigarettes after the state implemented a 95 percent excise tax on vapor products.

As such products fall outside the domain of cigarette taxes, several states and localities have created specific vapor product excise taxes, and some have simply expanded their definitions of “tobacco products” to include vapor products. Twenty-one states and the District of Columbia levy taxes on these products, while several localities levy the tax independently from their states. There is no federal tax on vapor products.

This week’s map shows where state vapor taxes stand as of June 1, 2020.

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Vapor taxing methods vary. Authorities tax based on price (ad valorem), volume (specific), or with a bifurcated system that has different rates for open and closed tank systems. Taxation based on volume is the simplest way to tax these goods, as it requires neither valuation nor expensive tax administration.

Of those that tax wholesale values, the District of Columbia tops the list with a 96 percent rate, but Minnesota comes in a close second at 95 percent. Massachusetts follows at 75 percent.

Delaware, Kansas, Louisiana, and North Carolina all share the lowest per milliliter rate ($0.05).  

Connecticut, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, and Washington have bifurcated rates, but Washington is the only state to have specific rates for both open and closed systems.

Some states have passed laws that will take effect later this summer. California will lower its wholesale rate from 59.27 percent to 56.93 percent on July 1. Kentucky’s rate of 15 percent of wholesale and $1.50 per cartridge will also take effect on July 1, while laws in Kentucky, Utah, Virginia, and Wyoming will go into effect on August 1.

Original Article Posted at : https://taxfoundation.org/vaping-taxes-by-state-2020/