Adult reader notice: This article is for adults 21+. Nicotine is addictive. People who do not use tobacco or nicotine products should not start.
A good product label can help an adult understand what a device is. A bad label tries to turn marketing into medicine. AK Vape News uses a simple rule for product coverage: compare verifiable facts first and treat health claims with suspicion unless an official source supports the exact wording.
Start With Product Identity
Look for the manufacturer, product name, device format, nicotine strength, pod or tank capacity, and whether the product is disposable, refillable, rechargeable, or closed-pod. If the label makes it hard to identify the actual manufacturer or product, that is a reporting problem and an advertising problem.
Nicotine Strength Needs Context
Nicotine strength can be listed in different ways, including milligrams per milliliter or percent. A label that shows a number without context can confuse readers. Product comparisons should quote the published strength and avoid turning it into a health claim.
Watch For Forbidden Claim Energy
FDA regulates the advertising and promotion of tobacco products. Publishers and advertisers should be careful with words that imply a product is safe, healthy, detoxifying, lower risk, light, low, mild, or useful for quitting unless the claim is specifically permitted and source-supported.
Authorization Status Is Product-Level
FDA’s ENDS materials point readers toward authorized product information and remind retailers that they should discuss the status of a particular product with suppliers. A brand name, distributor claim, or shelf presence is not enough.
What AK Vape News Will Compare
Our comparison tables should focus on published specs, device format, compatibility, labeling clarity, retailer disclosures, product status, and whether a paid relationship exists. That is better SEO and better journalism than pretending a product review is medical advice.