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nicotine - the facts, what does it do to you and your body

Nicotine: The Facts – What It Does, How It Works, and What the UK Research Actually Says

Nicotine is one of the most misunderstood substances in health and wellness. For decades it has been so closely associated with the devastating harm caused by smoking that many people assume nicotine itself is the main danger. The reality, according to UK health authorities and decades of research, is more nuanced than that.

Whether you’re a smoker considering switching to vaping, a vaper curious about the substance in your e-liquid, or someone who simply wants the facts, this guide provides an honest, evidence-based overview of what nicotine is, what it does to your brain and body, how addictive it is, and what leading UK health organisations say about its relative risks.

What Is Nicotine?

Nicotine is a naturally occurring chemical compound found primarily in tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum). It belongs to a class of chemicals called alkaloids and acts as a stimulant when consumed in small doses. The compound was named after Jean Nicot, a French diplomat who helped popularise tobacco use in Europe in the 1500s.

In its pure form, nicotine is a colourless, oily liquid. It’s found naturally in small quantities in other plants from the nightshade family, including tomatoes, potatoes, and aubergines, though at levels far too low to have any pharmacological effect.

When people smoke cigarettes, nicotine is just one of over 4,000 chemicals delivered to the body. It’s the chemical responsible for the addictive quality of smoking, but it’s not the chemical responsible for the vast majority of smoking-related diseases. That distinction is critical to understanding nicotine properly.

What Does Nicotine Do to Your Brain?

When nicotine enters your body – whether through smoking, vaping, or nicotine replacement therapy – it reaches the brain within approximately 10 to 20 seconds. Once there, it binds to specialised receptors called nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs). This binding triggers the release of several neurotransmitters, most notably:

  • Dopamine: The “reward” chemical. Dopamine creates feelings of pleasure and satisfaction, which is the primary mechanism behind nicotine’s addictive properties. The release of dopamine is what makes nicotine feel good in the moment.
  • Noradrenaline: Increases alertness and concentration. This is why many people report feeling more focused after nicotine use.
  • Serotonin: Contributes to mood regulation. Some users experience a mild improvement in mood.
  • Beta-endorphins: Natural pain-relief chemicals that can reduce anxiety and create a sense of calm.

Research published in the journal Current Topics in Behavioral Neurosciences confirms that attention, working memory, fine motor skills, and episodic memory are all sensitive to nicotine’s effects. However, these cognitive benefits are typically short-lived, and long-term smoking is actually associated with cognitive decline – largely due to the damage caused by other chemicals in tobacco smoke, not nicotine itself.

With repeated use, the brain adapts to the presence of nicotine by increasing the number of acetylcholine receptors. This is the basis of nicotine tolerance and dependence – the brain begins to “expect” nicotine, and withdrawal symptoms occur when levels drop.

Is Nicotine Harmful? What the UK Evidence Says

This is where the conversation gets important, because the answer depends entirely on how nicotine is delivered to the body.

Nicotine vs Tobacco: A Critical Distinction

The Royal College of Physicians (RCP) published a landmark report titled Nicotine Without Smoke: Tobacco Harm Reduction which states clearly that nicotine itself confers relatively little risk to health compared to smoked tobacco. The serious diseases associated with smoking – lung cancer, heart disease, COPD, stroke – are caused primarily by the tar, carbon monoxide, and thousands of other toxic chemicals in cigarette smoke, not by nicotine.

A 2022 evidence update from the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities (OHID), part of the UK Government’s Department of Health, reinforced that vaping nicotine is substantially less harmful than smoking. The NHS states on its website that vaping is an effective tool for quitting smoking and that e-cigarettes do not contain tar or carbon monoxide, two of the most harmful elements in tobacco smoke.

Action on Smoking and Health (ASH), a leading UK public health charity, published an evidence brief in November 2025 confirming that the health risks of nicotine are low when separated from tobacco combustion. Their summary referenced the RCP’s position that acute exposure can result in addiction, short-term elevated heart rate, and systolic blood pressure – but that these effects are relatively minor compared to the catastrophic harm of smoking.

What Nicotine Can Do to Your Body

While nicotine is far less harmful than smoking, it’s not completely without effects:

  • Heart rate and blood pressure: Nicotine temporarily increases heart rate and raises systolic blood pressure. For healthy adults, this effect is mild and transient. Studies cited by the OHID found that cardiovascular risk markers improve significantly when smokers switch to vaping.
  • Addiction: Nicotine is addictive. Regular use creates dependency, and stopping can produce withdrawal symptoms including irritability, difficulty concentrating, anxiety, and sleep disturbance. These symptoms are typically temporary and manageable.
  • Young people’s brains: The NHS warns that developing brains are more sensitive to nicotine’s addictive effects. This is why nicotine vaping products are restricted to over-18s in the UK, and why White Vape Co strictly enforces age verification both in-store and online.
  • Pregnancy: Nicotine use during pregnancy is not recommended. However, the NHS advises that if a pregnant smoker cannot quit unaided, vaping is preferable to continued smoking as it eliminates exposure to tar and carbon monoxide.

How Much Nicotine Is Too Much?

Nicotine poisoning from vaping at normal levels is extremely rare in adults. UK TPD regulations limit e-liquid nicotine concentration to a maximum of 20mg/ml, which provides a significant safety margin.

Signs that you may be consuming too much nicotine include nausea, dizziness, headache, and a racing heartbeat. If you experience any of these symptoms, the solution is simple: reduce your nicotine strength or vape less frequently. These symptoms resolve quickly once nicotine intake is reduced.

For context, the nicotine strengths commonly available in UK e-liquids are:

  • 3mg: Very low – suited to light or social smokers, or vapers stepping down.
  • 6mg: Low – common in freebase e-liquids for experienced vapers.
  • 10mg: Medium – a popular nic salt strength for moderate smokers making the switch.
  • 20mg: The UK legal maximum – recommended for heavier smokers transitioning to vaping.

Our staff at White Vape Co are trained to help you find the right nicotine strength for your needs. Getting this right is one of the most important factors in a successful switch from smoking to vaping – too low and you’ll crave cigarettes; too high and you may experience the symptoms described above.

Nicotine in Vaping vs Smoking vs NRT

Not all nicotine delivery methods are equal. Here’s how the three main methods compare:

Cigarettes

Deliver nicotine extremely quickly (reaching the brain in about 7 seconds) alongside over 4,000 chemicals, including approximately 80 known carcinogens, plus tar and carbon monoxide. Smoking is the leading preventable cause of death in the UK.

Vaping

Delivers nicotine in an aerosol without combustion. E-liquids typically contain nicotine, PG, VG, and food-grade flavourings. No tar, no carbon monoxide, no combustion. The NHS, Royal College of Physicians, and Cochrane Review all support vaping as a substantially less harmful alternative to smoking and an effective quitting tool.

Nicotine Replacement Therapy (NRT)

Patches, gums, lozenges, and inhalers deliver pharmaceutical-grade nicotine without tobacco. These are available on NHS prescription and are proven to help people quit smoking. Research published in Tobacco Control found no association between NRT use and increased risk of heart attack, stroke, or death.

Nicotine and Addiction: An Honest Look

Nicotine is addictive – there’s no getting around that. But it’s worth understanding what that means in practice.

The addictive potential of any substance depends not just on the chemical itself, but on the speed and method of delivery. Cigarettes are especially addictive because they deliver nicotine to the brain faster than almost any other method. Vaping delivers nicotine more slowly, and NRT products like patches deliver it slower still. This is one reason why many health professionals see vaping as a stepping stone that can eventually lead to complete nicotine cessation.

Withdrawal symptoms from nicotine typically peak within the first few days and subside within two to four weeks. Common symptoms include irritability, difficulty concentrating, increased appetite, and sleep disturbance. These are uncomfortable but not dangerous, and they are temporary.

If your long-term goal is to become completely nicotine-free, a common strategy is to gradually reduce your nicotine strength over time – for example, starting at 20mg, moving to 10mg, then to 3mg, and eventually to 0mg. Many of our customers at White Vape Co have successfully followed this approach.

Key Official Sources and Further Reading

We believe in transparency and evidence-based information. Here are the key UK sources referenced in this guide:

Getting the Right Support

If you’re currently smoking and considering making the switch to vaping, you don’t have to navigate it alone. White Vape Co is an official Smoke Free Hampshire partner, which means we can connect you with NHS-supported stop smoking services and offer free, personalised advice at any of our three Southampton-area stores.

Our team can help you choose the right device, find the right nicotine strength, and recommend e-liquids that suit your preferences. Whether you’re visiting our HytheTotton, or Holbury store, you’ll find friendly, knowledgeable staff who understand what you’re going through – because many of us have been through it ourselves.

Browse our range of starter kitsnic salts, and e-liquids online, or pop in for a chat. Join our Vape Club to earn rewards on every purchase. The best time to quit smoking is always now.

Frequently Asked Questions About Nicotine

Is nicotine the same as tobacco?

No. Nicotine is one chemical found naturally in tobacco plants. Tobacco smoke contains over 4,000 chemicals including tar and carbon monoxide, which cause the vast majority of smoking-related harm. Nicotine itself, while addictive, is not responsible for cancer or most smoking-related diseases.

Is nicotine harmful on its own?

The Royal College of Physicians states that nicotine itself confers relatively little risk to health compared to smoking tobacco. It can raise heart rate and blood pressure temporarily, and is addictive, but the serious health risks of smoking come from the other chemicals in tobacco smoke, not from nicotine alone.

What does nicotine do to your brain?

Nicotine binds to acetylcholine receptors in the brain, triggering the release of dopamine which creates feelings of pleasure and reward. With repeated use, the brain adapts to expect nicotine, which is how dependency develops. Nicotine can also temporarily improve concentration and attention.

How much nicotine is too much?

Nicotine poisoning in adults is rare from vaping or NRT at recommended levels. Symptoms of too much nicotine include nausea, dizziness, headache, and a racing heartbeat. If you experience these, reduce your nicotine strength. E-liquids in the UK are limited to 20mg/ml under TPD regulations.

Is nicotine in vapes safer than in cigarettes?

The nicotine itself is the same compound, but the delivery method matters enormously. Cigarette smoke delivers nicotine alongside thousands of harmful chemicals. Vaping delivers nicotine in a vapour without tar or carbon monoxide. The NHS states that vaping is substantially less harmful than smoking.

What nicotine strength should I use in my vape?

This depends on your smoking history and device. Former heavy smokers typically start at 20mg nic salts in a pod kit. Moderate smokers often do well with 10mg. Light or social smokers may prefer 3mg–6mg freebase. Our staff at White Vape Co can help you find the right strength – visit us in HytheTotton, or Holbury, or browse our device package deals to get started.

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