Shopify is preparing to ban all vape products from its platform as early as this week, according to two sources familiar with its plans. The Ottawa-based e-commerce company confirmed it “adjusts enforcement when legal changes call for it,” but declined to confirm specifics.
Shopify Inc., SHOP
SHOP stock slipped 0.44% in pre-market trading Monday, and was down around 0.80% on the day.
The decision follows over a year of talks between Shopify and a bipartisan coalition of 25 U.S. state attorneys general. The officials have been pushing the company to crack down on a booming market for vapes sold without proper U.S. licenses.
The U.S. illegal vape market is estimated at $9 billion, according to British American Tobacco. The FDA has only granted marketing authorisation to 45 e-cigarette products to date, mostly tobacco-flavoured.
Unlicensed vapes, largely manufactured in China, are widely sold through online platforms, vape shops, convenience stores, and gas stations despite being illegal to import or sell in the U.S.
The expected Shopify ban will apply to all vape products in the U.S., regardless of FDA authorisation status. That’s a broader move than many expected, catching licensed players like British American Tobacco and Juul in the net alongside unlicensed sellers.
One source noted that a relatively small portion of authorised vape sales happen online, so the impact on licensed operators should be limited. E-commerce is a much more important channel for illegal vape sellers, making the ban’s practical effect somewhat targeted.
The geographic scope beyond the U.S. remains unclear. Shopify did not respond to questions on that front.
One source described the potential fallout for sellers as a “chilling effect” — a phrase that captures how platform-level bans can reshape behaviour even beyond the directly targeted products.
Shopify isn’t the only one moving. Mastercard issued a global notice to its acquiring partners in May, warning that facilitating unlicensed vape sales violates its network standards.
The notice told acquirers — the financial institutions that process card payments — that they must implement controls including reviewing merchant product inventories and monitoring transactions. Mastercard said it would investigate stores found selling illegal vapes through its network, with potential fines for non-compliant retailers and acquirers.
The coordinated pressure from both a major payments network and a leading e-commerce platform marks a step-up in enforcement targeting the supply chain around illegal vapes.
For Shopify, the vape ban reflects a broader regulatory reality. Legal & Regulatory risks account for 10.4% of Shopify’s overall risk profile according to TipRanks, below the sector average of 15.5%.
Wall Street remains constructive on SHOP, with 21 Buy ratings and four Hold ratings over the last three months. The average price target stands at $156.02, implying around 44.5% upside from current levels.
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