Scandinavia has long been a unique outlier in the world of nicotine consumption. When much of the world still relied on cigarettes, Sweden and Norway famously embraced snus, a small pouch of powdered tobacco leaves placed under the lip, that helped these nations achieve some of the lowest smoking rates in Europe.
Now, a new Nordic experience is unfolding. According to a landmark cross-sectional study published in JMIR Public Health and Surveillance a massive market shift is underway: Tobacco-free nicotine pouches (NPs) have officially overtaken traditional snus in market share.
Key Takeaways |
| Market Share Flip: Nicotine pouches officially overtook traditional snus in market share in both Sweden and Norway by 2025. |
| Enhanced Harm Reduction: Nicotine pouches are tobacco-free and contain substantially fewer toxicants than snus, giving them a chemical profile similar to pharmaceutical nicotine replacement therapies (NRTs). |
| Women Drive Adoption: Women were the early adopters and key drivers of this market trend, with a full market crossover among men predicted by 2026. |
The study, led by Dr. Marina A. Murphy and colleagues, analyzed over 19 million e-commerce orders from the HAYPP Group across Sweden and Norway. The data reveals a swift and decisive transition in consumer preference.
In 2018, nicotine pouches were a niche product in Sweden, holding just a 5% volume share of the oral nicotine market compared to snus at 95%. By 2025, the landscape has almost flipped:
Norway saw an even more rapid initial adoption, starting at a 22% share in 2018. By 2025, nicotine pouches had climbed to 56% of the oral nicotine market, leaving snus with 44%.
The significance of this shift lies in the chemical composition of the products. While traditional snus is already recognized by many health authorities (including the US FDA) as a lower-risk alternative to cigarettes, nicotine pouches go a step further.
The study highlighted that women were the early adopters of this trend, surpassing snus use with nicotine pouches as early as 2022. While men in both countries still purchase more traditional snus, the gap is narrowing rapidly, with researchers predicting a full market crossover for men by 2026 if current trends persist.
The researchers suggest that nicotine pouches are doing to snus what snus once did to cigarettes: displacing a higher-risk product with a lower-risk one. However, they emphasize that ongoing monitoring is essential. To maximize the public health benefits of this transition, the study points to several critical pillars:
| In this video, Dr. Marina A. Murphy from HAYPP Group shares groundbreaking insights from a cross-sectional study of over 19 million e-commerce orders in Sweden and Norway. |
Why JMIR?
The authors chose JMIR Public Health and Surveillance to share these findings due to the journal's focus on the intersection of digital health and professional practice. As Scandinavia looks to build a more data-informed health system, this review provides the evidence base needed to shape the next generation of health care analytics.
Curious to see how nicotine consumption is reshaping the future of public health? Watch the video featuring Marina A. Murphy and read the full cross-sectional study to explore the sales trends and the strategic roadmap for tobacco harm reduction.