According to the 2024 National Youth Tobacco Survey, only 8 percent of middle and high school students — or 2.25 million — reported using any tobacco products in the past 30 days. As recently as 2019, 23 percent, or just over 6 million, had reported current tobacco use, driven almost entirely by e-cigarette use, at 20 percent.
E-cigarettes are still the most popular choice, used by 6 percent of middle and high school students in 2024, researchers report October 17 in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. Nicotine pouches — a product that releases nicotine when placed between the cheek and gum — came in second for the first time at nearly 2 percent, followed by cigarettes, cigars and smokeless tobacco. The National Youth Tobacco Survey began measuring use among students in 1999.
Use disparities
Overall, only 8 percent of U.S. teens and tweens reported current use of tobacco products in 2024 (red dotted line). But looking at use by different racial and ethnic groups reveals that disparities remain.Source
More high school students, at 10 percent, reported use of any tobacco product in the past 30 days than middle school students, at 5.4 percent. Just under 8 percent of high school students reported current use of e-cigarettes in 2024, falling from 10 percent in 2023. That decrease of 350,000 high school students was a big reason for the decline in current use of any product among all students surveyed.