The short version.
Nicotine pouches — Zyn is the dominant brand, with Velo, On!, and Rogue close behind — are small flavored pouches that deliver nicotine through the gum line. They contain no tobacco, which lets manufacturers market them as 'cleaner' than vapes or cigarettes. They are highly addictive, easy to hide (no smell, no vapor, no smoke), and have exploded among teens since 2022. Sales of Zyn alone roughly quintupled between 2022 and 2024.
The platforms and contexts.
Convenience stores, gas stations, and online retailers — many ship without age verification. Inside schools, the pouches pass classmate-to-classmate in bathrooms, hallways, and during class because they leave no signal. TikTok 'Zynfluencer' content drives demand.
The timeline.
Pouches existed earlier but the teen-targeted scaleup is a 2022–2025 story. Several U.S. states moved to restrict flavors and online sales in 2024–2025.
The core facts a parent needs.
- Pouches deliver more nicotine, faster, than most cigarettes. Dependence develops within weeks for daily users.
- Because pouches leave no smell or visible signal, parents and teachers often don't notice for months. The first sign is usually irritability or stained gums.
- Marketing language ('tobacco-free,' 'cleaner') is technically accurate and behaviorally misleading. The harms are nicotine harms, not specifically tobacco harms — and they are serious in adolescent brains.
What's actually at stake.
- Nicotine dependence with severe withdrawal symptoms — anxiety, irritability, sleep disruption — affecting school performance.
- Long-term cardiovascular effects (elevated heart rate, blood pressure) from continuous use.
- Gum recession and oral lesions at the pouch placement site, especially with high-strength pouches.
Concrete next steps.
- Look at the trash, the laundry, the backpack pockets. Small flat round tins are the most reliable signal.
- If your teen is using, treat it as a real addiction — not a phase. Nicotine replacement therapy (patch, gum) is approved and effective for older teens; ask the pediatrician.
- Push hard on the school. Many schools still treat pouches as a discipline issue rather than a health issue, which keeps families out of the loop.
See it for yourself.
Call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, 24/7) · Text HOME to 741741 (Crisis Text Line) · Find a child psychiatrist at aacap.org · For immediate danger, call 911.