Review: The Fall of Cigarette Vending Machines
Formerly ubiquitous tobacco vending machine sales are now banned under a 2010 FDA measure.
![miniscigarettevending_wikimediacommons | Wikimedia Commons](https://d2eehagpk5cl65.cloudfront.net/img/c800x450-w800-q80/uploads/2022/06/miniscigarettevending_wikimediacommons-800x450.jpg)
Back in the 1970s and 1980s, cigarette vending machines could be found in nearly every restaurant, bar, convenience store, and gas station. At the time I was an enthusiastic bar-hopping chain smoker, so I cherished their ubiquity. Since then, they have been largely banished from the American commercial landscape.
In 1989, Utah became the first state to enact a total ban on cigarette vending machines in locations accessible to minors. This focus on vending machines was a bit odd since a 1992 article in the journal Tobacco Control reported that minors obtained 71 percent of their tobacco from over-the-counter sales, 19 percent from friends, 7 percent from parents, and just 3 percent from vending machines.
A decade later, a total of 19 states and the District of Columbia had also banned them from areas accessible to minors. The Food and Drug Administration struck the final blow in 2010 when, pursuant to the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, the agency banned tobacco vending machine sales nationwide, with the exception of adults-only facilities.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Cigarette Vending Machine."
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Never used one but very familiar with seeing them at restaurants and other locations. I always wondered about the easy access to children but assumed most kids were like me and could not afford cigarettes.
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There is a cigarette vending machine next to "my" stool at the local bar. The cigarettes are $10 a pack, and require a bartender to push a button behind the bar before it will dispense a pack; to keep kids from buying cigarettes I assume. It's fun to watch the visitors come in and when they realize what it is, they point it out to their friends. About 1/3 of them will take pictures of it. Times have changed indeed.
CB
Smoke em if you
got emcan get em"This focus on vending machines was a bit odd since a 1992 article in the journal Tobacco Control reported that minors obtained 71 percent of their tobacco from over-the-counter sales, 19 percent from friends, 7 percent from parents, and just 3 percent from vending machines."
So vending machines were the AR-15s of cigarette purchase.
Especially the large-capacity vending machines with the pointy things that go up.
Vending machines will probably make a come back, even in schools when they are allowed to start dispensing hashish, pot and lottery tickets and morning after abortion pills.
If you find one somewhere, buy it. The old style ones are worth anywhere from $1,000-$5000. Buddy of mine who has an HVAC business finds stuff at homes all the time and will make an offer if it's an interesting item. Bought an old machine that a guy had in his garage for $100 and then sold it for $3000 to an antiques collector. He was quite surprised at how much it fetched.
It's always a gas to see them in places just because of the nostalgia factor. Also, if you go in a place that has one, it's probably a nice little drinking hole with good folks in it.
Vending machines are already making a comeback. Except now they dispense Narcan to reverse drug overdoses. I believe San Diego is paying for them to be installed in locations throughout the city.
And bowling alleys, don't forget the bowling alleys.
American vending machines used to be much more fun and less gross than the Japanese ones.
I remember in 1996 I was in Germany and they still had the vending machines. You had to scan a driver's license to use them.
Who elected the FDA?
We all did.
Moo.