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Myanmar Enacts Comprehensive Ban on E-Cigarettes and Vaping Devices

On February 18, 2026, the Ministry of Health issued a directive regarding vaping devices. Under Notification No. 8 2026, the government has officially designated electronic smoking devices and related accessories as “essential goods,” enacting a sweeping ban under the authority of the Essential Supplies and Services Law.

On February 18, 2026, the Ministry of Health issued a directive regarding vaping devices. Under Notification No. 8 2026, the government has officially designated electronic smoking devices and related accessories as “essential goods,” enacting a sweeping ban under the authority of the Essential Supplies and Services Law.

Notably, the government’s decision to classify vaping devices as “essential goods” represents a significant legal escalation. Traditionally reserved for commodities critical to public welfare, this classification grants authorities broad enforcement powers, including criminal prosecution, and signals the state’s intent to eliminate vaping entirely rather than regulate it.

Scope of the Ban: What Devices and Accessories Are Affected?

The newly enacted prohibition applies to a broad spectrum of vaping technology and all associated components. Specifically, the banned items are categorized into three main groups:

  • Electronic Smoking Devices (E-Cigarettes): This category bans e-cigarettes, similar items, and all of their accessories. Prohibited components include mouthpieces, e-liquid reservoirs (such as cartridges, tanks, and pods), atomizers, microprocessors, batteries, chargers, and charging cables. Furthermore, e-liquids (both with and without nicotine), flavoring substances, carrying cases, and cleaning tools are strictly banned.
  • Heated Smoking Devices: Devices engineered to heat rather than burn substances are fully restricted. Banned accessories for these devices cover holders, casings, batteries, microprocessors, heating blades, heating coils, and heating ovens. Related e-liquids, flavors, carrying cases, cleaning tools, chargers, and charging cables are also prohibited.
  • Electronic Shisha: Electronic shishas and similar devices fall under the prohibition. Banned parts for e-shishas include mouthpieces, hoses, water vases, grommets, e-liquid reservoirs, flow sensors, atomizers, and microprocessors. In addition, e-liquids, molasses (with or without nicotine), flavors, batteries, chargers, charging cables, carrying cases, and cleaning tools are prohibited.
Prohibited Activities

The directive explicitly states that it is entirely illegal for any individual or entity to import, export, trade, possess, store, transport, distribute, use, or consume the designated goods.

Penalties for Non-Compliance

Individuals or businesses found violating this ban will face legal action and prosecution under the Essential Supplies and Services Law. Under Section 5 of this governing law, anyone convicted of violating these orders is subject to severe penalties, which include a minimum of six months up to a maximum of three years of imprisonment. Additionally, offenders will be liable for a fine not exceeding 500,000 Kyats.

While a number of countries in the region have outlawed vaping and e-cigarettes, users are normally only subject to a fine. With potential imprisonment, potential penalties in Myanmar are severe.

Impact on businesses

With vaping products being primarily sold by small independent shops and distributors in larger cities, it is not expected that there will be any widespread impact. With the directive coming into immediate effect there will be a significant impact on these businesses, not having a grace period to sell off their stocks, however whether the directive will be strictly implemented will have to be seen.