New law banning 10-packs of cigarettes and making packaging bland comes in next week

The legislation will see cigarette packets covered in health warnings and designed in 'drab' colours

Harriet Sinclair
Wednesday 18 May 2016 05:42 EDT
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No more menthols or 10-packs of cigarettes
No more menthols or 10-packs of cigarettes (Matt Cardy/Getty)

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The laws on cigarette packaging are set to change by the end of the month, with 10-packs banned and boxes designed to be ‘drab’ and covered in health warnings.

New regulations, which come into effect from 20 May, will see packaging ‘standardised’ so they have the same colour, opening mechanism and font, and with 60 per cent of the casing covered by text and images showing how smoking affects your health.

Tobacco companies have one year from 20 May to get rid of old stock and roll out new packs, following a decision in Parliament on 15 May last year on the EU Tobacco Products Directive that also saw MPs vote in favour of banning menthol and flavoured tobacco, which will come into effect from 2020.

They have also been told to get rid of any misleading information from cigarette packs, and have been prevented from using words such as ‘organic’, ‘natural’ or ‘lite’, which could lead consumers to believe there is a healthy smoking option.

New smoking ban

The new law is an attempt to reduce the uptake of smoking in the UK following a review conducted by paediatrician Sir Cyril Chandler that suggested a change in packaging could make a small dent in the number of young people who tale up smoking; a figure that currently stands at more than 600 per day.

Tobacco companies had sought to overturn the decision, but the European Court of Justice ruled that the EU Tobacco Products Directive was lawful, confirming the changes would begin from 20 May.

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