Vaping Withdrawal Symptoms — What Happens When You Put Down the Vape

Most people don't see it coming. They quit, and then day two hits like a wall.

The thought going in is usually some version of it's just a vape. Not cigarettes. Not something serious. So the withdrawal — the irritability, the brain fog, the cravings that arrive every twenty minutes — comes as a genuine shock.

Here's why it shouldn't. Modern disposables and pod systems deliver nicotine at concentrations cigarettes never came close to matching. When you stop, your body reacts proportionally to what it was getting — not to what you assumed you were getting. That gap between expectation and reality is why vaping withdrawal catches so many people off guard.

This is what's actually happening, symptom by symptom.


Why Vaping Withdrawal Can Be Worse Than Cigarette Withdrawal

This isn't a scare tactic. It's chemistry.

Traditional cigarettes deliver nicotine through freebase nicotine, which absorbs relatively slowly through the lungs. Older cigarettes typically ran somewhere around 10–15mg of nicotine per cigarette — and much of that was lost to combustion or exhaled.

Modern pod systems and disposables use nicotine salts. Salt nicotine absorbs faster and hits at concentrations that would make freebase nicotine at the same level feel harsh and unsmokable. Products like JUUL popularised pods with around 50mg/ml — a single pod delivering roughly the same nicotine as a full pack of cigarettes. Many of the high-capacity disposables now on the market contain even more.

What that means practically: a regular vaper in 2025 is likely more nicotine-dependent than a pack-a-day smoker from thirty years ago. Their brain has adapted to a higher baseline. When the vape disappears, the gap is bigger.

The nicotine withdrawal symptoms are the same whether you vaped or smoked — but the intensity tracks with the dose. That's worth knowing before you write off what you're feeling as dramatic.


The Full Symptom Breakdown

Vaping withdrawal isn't one thing. It's a cluster of symptoms that arrive at different times, peak at different points, and fade at different rates. Here's the full picture.

Symptom Onset Peak Duration
Intense cravings 2–4 hours Days 3–5 Weeks (decreasing)
Irritability / mood swings 24 hours Days 3–5 2–4 weeks
Anxiety 24 hours First week 2–4 weeks
Difficulty concentrating 24 hours Days 3–5 2–4 weeks
Insomnia 24 hours First week 2–4 weeks
Headaches 24 hours Days 1–3 1–2 weeks
Increased appetite Days 1–3 Weeks 2–4 Months
Brain fog Days 1–3 First week 2–4 weeks
Mouth / throat dryness Immediately First week 1–2 weeks
Coughing Days 3–7 Week 2 2–4 weeks

A few things worth noting about that table.

Cravings don't last forever. They peak hard in the first week and then become shorter, less frequent, and easier to ride out. The craving that feels unbearable on day four is genuinely not the same craving you'll have on day twenty-one.

The coughing is your lungs clearing out. It feels counterintuitive — you stopped vaping and now you're coughing more — but it's the airway recovering. The cilia in your lungs start working again. That's a good sign, even when it doesn't feel like one.

The appetite increase is real and it's not weakness. Nicotine suppresses appetite and bumps up metabolism slightly. When it's gone, both effects reverse. Expecting this in advance makes it easier to manage.

Check the full quit vaping timeline to see how these symptoms shift week by week.


The Vape-Specific Problem

There's something about vaping that makes withdrawal harder in a way that has nothing to do with nicotine concentration.

Cigarettes have a defined structure. You light one, you smoke it, and it's done. There's a natural stopping point built into the format. That means usage — even heavy usage — has a rhythm. Light one, finish it, put it out.

A vape doesn't work that way. It's always in your pocket. It's always charged. There's no natural endpoint, no moment where the thing is finished and you put it away. The result is that vapers often use more frequently and more unconsciously than cigarette smokers do. During a film. In between sentences. First thing in the morning without thinking about it.

That constant, ambient nicotine input means the brain doesn't get much time without it — which deepens the physical dependency. And it means the hand-to-mouth habit is more ingrained, because it's been happening more often and with less intention.

Both the physical dependency and the behavioural habit need addressing when you quit vaping.


What Actually Helps

There's no trick that makes withdrawal disappear. But there are things that genuinely reduce the difficulty.

Nicotine Replacement Therapy (NRT). Patches, gum, and lozenges all work by delivering a lower, steadier level of nicotine — enough to take the edge off the worst cravings while you step the dose down over time. They're available over the counter and they have a solid evidence base. Talk to a pharmacist or GP about what format suits your situation.

Get the device out of the house. Not in a drawer. Not "just in case." Out. The decision to use it again is much harder if you have to go and buy a new one. That friction matters when a craving hits at 11pm.

Tell someone. Not for accountability theatre — just so the people around you know why you might be short-tempered for a couple of weeks. It reduces the social friction of being irritable and makes it less likely you'll end up in a situation where someone offers you a vape without knowing.

Replace the hand-to-mouth habit. This one gets underestimated. Toothpicks, gum, a stress ball, a pen — it sounds small, but the physical habit of reaching for something is deeply grooved. Giving your hands something else to do takes the edge off.

Exercise. Even a twenty-minute walk. Exercise bumps dopamine and reduces craving intensity. It's not a cure, but on day three when everything feels lousy, it helps more than sitting with it.

Track your days. Seeing a number climb — even from one to two to three — gives you something concrete to protect. Track your vape-free days and let the streak do some of the work.


FAQ

Are vaping withdrawal symptoms worse than cigarette withdrawal?

Often, yes — especially for people who used high-nicotine pod systems or disposables. The nicotine delivery in modern vapes is more efficient and at higher concentrations than traditional cigarettes. A heavier dependency means a harder withdrawal. The symptoms themselves are identical; the intensity varies with how much nicotine the brain was receiving.

How long does vaping withdrawal last?

The acute phase — the worst of the cravings, mood disruption, and physical symptoms — typically runs two to four weeks. Most people find the first week the hardest, with days three through five being the peak. After that, symptoms ease progressively. Some cravings and appetite changes can persist for a few months, but they're manageable compared to the first fortnight.

Can I use nicotine pouches instead of vaping?

Nicotine pouches are a harm reduction option — they deliver nicotine without the inhaled aerosol. Whether they're a useful stepping stone or just a substitute habit depends on how you use them. If you're using them as part of a planned taper — lower dose, fewer times per day, working toward nothing — they can help. If you're using them at the same frequency and intensity as your vape, you're not really reducing the dependency. Be honest with yourself about which one it is.


Got questions about what you're experiencing? The crisis support page has resources if things feel harder than just physical symptoms.


About the author: 180 - Benjy writes at 180habits.com about quitting nicotine, building better habits, and what actually works — based on research, not inspiration. No fluff.