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AAP
AAP
(A)manda Parkinson

Plan for illegal vape sale profits to go up in smoke

A state government is set to crackdown on illegal vape sales with heftier fines. (Joel Carrett/AAP PHOTOS)

Shops selling illegal vapes are being eyed by a state government that's looking to financially disrupt the booming underground market and add to the impact of a federal crackdown.

Queensland Health Minister Tim Nicholls revealed the government is looking at more extreme measures to interrupt supply chains by imposing greater fines on retailers.

Currently Queensland Health officers can issue a $3,200 fine for individual retailers and $10,000 for corporations.

"At the rate that they're selling these vapes and illicit tobacco, that is just a drop in the ocean, that is like a flea bite to some of these operators," Mr Nicholls said. 

A person vaping (file image)
It is illegal to buy vapes from anywhere other than pharmacies, after recent government reforms. (Diego Fedele/AAP PHOTOS)

"We currently have 350 to 400 stores under surveillance ... by the time we get to court, where the bigger penalties are ... they have already recouped the funds."

However, Mr Nicholls did not provide any details about the increase in fines or when to expect the legislative reform. 

"I think we want to make sure that they're right, and we want to make sure that we're not just sort of having multiple bites at the cherry on that one," he told reporters.

"The aim is to take away the financial incentive and make it more expensive to carry out the business than the profits generated by doing it."

In October 2024 the Commonwealth government made sweeping changes to the sale of vapes, making it illegal to purchase them from anywhere other than pharmacies.

Small retailers and corner stores, who have traditionally sold cigarettes, lost a significant market when pharmacies became the only place to sell nicotine-containing vapes.

Vapes for sale
The Queensland government plans to strengthen laws to deter illegal vape and tobacco sales. (Joel Carrett/AAP PHOTOS)

However, Mr Nicholls said the laws have not gone far enough to provide a "deterrent". 

"A closure for 72 hours means someone just gets a long weekend," he said. 

"What we want to be able to do is hit them in the hip pocket, so if they've got a long weekend, they're not using it to go to Hampton Island."

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