Smoking Laws in Europe vs. Canada: 5 Surprising Differences You’ll See | Cigstore.ca
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Smoking Laws in Europe vs. Canada: 5 Surprising Differences You’ll See

🌍 From outdoor cafés in Paris to vaping in Prague — and why native smokes from Cigstore.ca are the smart choice wherever you light up.

70%

of European countries allow smoking on outdoor café terraces

0%

Canadian provinces allowing indoor smoking in bars (banned since 2005-2015)

$2.90

Canadian Light — pack of 20 native cigarettes from Cigstore.ca

The short answer: Europe is generally more permissive toward smoking in public spaces than Canada — but the gap is closing. Many countries still allow smoking on café patios, in designated bar rooms, and even in some private clubs. However, if you’re looking for native smokes or cheap smoke alternatives, Canada’s unique tax‑exempt market is unbeatable.

🇪🇺🇨🇦 5 Surprising Differences

1️⃣ ☕ Outdoor Café Terraces: Allowed in Most of Europe, Banned Almost Everywhere in Canada

In Paris, Rome, Barcelona, and Berlin, smoking on outdoor café terraces is still widely permitted. In many countries (France, Italy, Spain, Greece), ashtrays are standard on sidewalk tables. In Canada, provincial laws ban smoking on patios in Ontario (since 2015), BC (since 2016), Quebec (since 2016), and most other provinces. The only exceptions are some rooftop patios in private clubs — but generally, Canadian smokers are pushed off patios and onto the sidewalk.

💡 Travel tip for Canadian smokers: When visiting Europe, you can still enjoy a coffee and a flavour cigarette on a Parisian terrace. At home, you’ll need to step away from the patio — but you can order cigarettes online from Cigstore.ca and save thousands while respecting local laws.

2️⃣ 🚬 Indoor Smoking Rooms: Still Exist in Some European Airports and Bars, Extinct in Canada

Canada banned smoking in all indoor public places (bars, restaurants, workplaces) between 2005‑2015. No exceptions. In Europe, many countries still have designated smoking rooms in airports (Frankfurt, Munich, Zurich, Vienna), bars, and even some restaurants. The Netherlands, Germany, Austria, and the Czech Republic allow smoking in separate, well‑ventilated rooms or in smaller establishments that don’t serve food.

💡 What this means: A Canadian smoker landing in Frankfurt can find a smoking lounge after security. At Pearson or YVR, you’ll be directed outside — and you’ll need to carry your own native smokes because airport shops only sell expensive commercial cigarettes.

3️⃣ 🧒 Legal Smoking Age: 16-18 in Most of Europe vs. 18-19 in Canada

Canada’s legal smoking age is 18 or 19 (depending on the province). Europe generally sets the age at 18, but several countries (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Netherlands) still allow purchase at 16 for tobacco products. Switzerland has no federal minimum age (varies by canton, often 16‑18). This younger access age is one reason European smoking rates remain higher than Canadian rates.

💡 For Canadian travellers: You won’t see ID checks as frequently in European convenience stores. But you also won’t find cheap smoke alternatives like native cigarettes — European prices are generally €6‑9 per pack ($9‑13 CAD), still more expensive than Cigstore.ca’s $2.90‑5.00 per pack.

4️⃣ 💨 Vaping and Heated Tobacco: More Widely Accepted in Europe

Europe has been more permissive toward vaping and heated tobacco products (IQOS, Glo). Many countries allow vaping in bars and restaurants, and heated tobacco is often treated like smoking (restricted) but not banned outright. Canada regulates vaping under the same rules as smoking in most provinces — no vaping where smoking is banned. The EU has stricter flavour bans for vaping products, whereas Canada has flavour restrictions for commercial cigarettes (not native brands).

💡 Why this matters: If you’re trying to reduce harm, European policies may offer more flexibility. But for pure cost savings, nothing beats native smokes from Cigstore.ca — $2.90 per pack vs. €8‑10 for heated tobacco sticks.

5️⃣ 🏷️ Plain Packaging: Canada was First, Europe Followed (But Slower)

Canada became the first country in the world to mandate plain packaging for commercial cigarettes in 2019. The UK followed in 2020, Ireland in 2021, France and Germany later. Many European countries still allow branded packaging (Switzerland, Austria, Eastern European nations). This means you can still see recognizable packs (Marlboro, Camel, Winston) in many European stores — while Canadian commercial packs are all drab brown boxes.

💡 The Canadian advantage: Native cigarettes from Cigstore.ca are exempt from plain packaging laws. You get full‑colour packaging with real branding — something European smokers can still see, but Canadians can’t (except from Indigenous retailers).

Price comparison (per pack):
🇫🇷 France: €11 (~$16 CAD)
🇩🇪 Germany: €8 (~$12 CAD)
🇮🇹 Italy: €6 (~$9 CAD)
🇬🇧 UK: £16 (~$28 CAD)
🇨🇦 Canada (native): $2.90 CAD (Canadian Light)
💡 Smart travellers stock up before they leave.

📋 Summary Table: Europe vs. Canada Smoking Laws

FeatureEurope (typical)Canada
Outdoor café smoking✅ Widely permitted❌ Banned in most provinces
Indoor smoking rooms (airports/bars)✅ Some still exist❌ Completely banned
Legal smoking age16‑18 (varies)18‑19 (by province)
Vaping in bars✅ Often permitted❌ Banned where smoking is banned
Plain packaging⚠️ Some countries, not all✅ Yes (commercial only)
Native/tax‑exempt cigarettes❌ No (illegal)✅ Legal (Cigstore.ca)
Price per pack (cheapest legal)€6‑11 ($9‑16 CAD)$2.90‑5.00 (native)

Before your next European trip, stock up on native smokes from Cigstore.ca.

$29 flat shipping under $290. Free shipping over $290. All cartons contain 10 packs of 20 cigarettes (200 total) unless noted.

Shop Native Cigarettes →

Cigstore.ca – Indigenous-owned native cigarette store. Adult signature required. Prices subject to change. Native cigarettes are exempt from federal excise duties and provincial tobacco taxes.

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