What Disposable Vapes Can Sell To Texas?
Yeah, we all know that the new Texas Senate Bill 2024 law outlawed many disposables and rendered most products in the market illegal. Actually, retailers and vapers had quite a long time to sell off their inventories (for sellers) and stock up their favorites (for buyers) before the law took effect as of September 1, 2025.
But you see, no matter how many vapes you stock up, you would still run out of your stock someday, and if you stocked up to be able to resell to your close pals when those vapes get wiped from shelves, then you’d even have a shorter time before you’re out. Well, that’s not the main focus for today—we’re looking at the possibility of still getting disposable vapes in Texas.
Is that even possible? Well, yeah. It’s still possible to purchase and get disposable vapes shipped to you in Texas. What the SB 2024 outlawed were vapes “wholly or partially manufactured in or marketed as being manufactured” in China. So, all made-in-US vapes are pretty much still legal. That said, let’s look at the full details of this topic.
A Quick One
Texas’s new vaping law (Senate Bill 2024) was signed by Gov. Greg Abbott on June 20, 2025, and took effect on September 1, 2025. The law bans the sale and marketing of virtually all pre-filled disposable e-cigarettes and vape pens in Texas. However, in particular, the law outlaws any device or e-liquid “wholly or partially manufactured in or marketed as being manufactured” in China.
Officials noted this was needed “so we do not end up with empty shelves of banned products”. In practice, SB 2024 made selling or advertising Chinese-brand disposables (including THC carts) a crime in Texas. Violating the ban carries misdemeanor penalties up to one year in jail or a $4,000 fine. But the law does allow one narrow exception. Refillable vape devices that are assembled and filled in the U.S. are exempt. In other words, only products with U.S.-made components can still be sold.

Because of SB 2024, Texas vape retailers have been pulling Chinese-brand disposables from shelves. Almost any remaining foreign-made high-puff device is now illegal to sell in Texas. Stores that ship or advertise these banned vapes to Texas customers will now face legal penalties, so most merchants simply do not carry them anymore.
The law targets focus more on sellers, not buyers – a person possessing these “banned” vapes is not criminalized, but any business supplying them within Texas or to Texans (via import) will be penalized. So, yeah, well-known brands like Geek Bar, Elf Bar, FOG Bar, and all those other popular Chinese-made disposables have been withdrawn from Texas markets.
Well, with that backdrop, there are now fewer products Texans can buy, and while these available legalized ones may not be your favorites, with time, you could come to love them—they aren’t bad, actually. Take, for example, Fifty Bars, I mean, they are super premium disposables, and yeah, you can still buy them in Texas.
What Disposable Vapes Can Still Sell To Texas?
Actually, we will look into four popular disposables that sell in Texas pre-SB2024 and whether or not you can still legally buy them in the state.
1. Rodman Playoffs 50K Disposable Vape
The Rodman Playoffs 50K is a mid-tier disposable vape model in the Rodman series. Yeah, it is one of the disposables in the market that promises up to a whopping 50,000 puffs. The device is powered by a 650mAh rechargeable battery, and it is draw-activated; concealing dual-mesh coils for flavor heating—this disposable is button-less.

You’re getting 20mL of prefilled e-liquid, which is quite bigger than the capacity of many typical disposables, and it is so to match the high puff rating. Flavor options for the Playoffs 50K include Watermelon Apple, Blue Razz Cotton Candy, Honeydew Strawberry, Glacier Mint, and White Peach Ice. These cover a range of fruity, sweet, and menthol profiles.
Inarguably, the Playoffs 50K is an ideal disposable to own and vape, whether you’re a light vaper or a heavy vaper. But now to the legality aspect in Texas, the Rodman Playoffs 50K is made overseas, so it is affected by the SB2024 ban. Any Texas retailer that still carries this disposable vape would be penalized if found.
2. Fifty Bar V2 20K Disposable Vape
If you know about Fiftys, you will know that the brand is a US brand, so most of this vape brouhaha doesn’t really affect them, except that they’re also yet to be whitelisted by the FDA. So, the Fifty Bar V2 20K is an exception in Texas, which means it can still be bought within the state—you may yet find it in local stores or have online retailers ship it to you.
The device itself promises up to 20k puffs, featuring a 16mL prefilled tank, and powered by a solid 800mAh battery that is rechargeable via a USB-C port. Of course, it conceals the industry’s standard dual parallel-mesh coils for rich vapor production, while flaunting a full-color digital display on the body with digital indicators for the battery and e-liquid levels.

It also features an “always-on” boost mode and three airflow settings for precise draw control. The flavor gallery is vast, including very unique, specially-formulated options like Blueberry Cereal Donut Milk, Butterbean (a butter-cookie treat), Cinnamon Funnel Cake, Vanilla Custard, Green Apple Blast, Rainbow Road, Mint, and Watermelon Patch (among many others).
The twist is that Fifty Bar V2 is assembled in the USA. Although its hardware comes from overseas, each Fifty Bar unit is filled with Beard Vape Co. e-liquid and packaged in California. Because of this domestic assembly, the Fifty Bar is essentially covered by the ban on Chinese disposables.
So, the Fifty Bar V2 20K remains fully legal to sell and buy in Texas after the 2025 ban. Yeah, vape retailers can still advertise it and ship it to Texas customers without penalty.
3. Rodman MVP 65K Disposable Vape
Rodman MVP 65K is an ultra-high-capacity disposable vape, rated for 65,000 puffs per device, which is one of the highest you will ever find on the disposable vape market. To cater to this high puff count, Rodman packed a 1000mAh rechargeable battery into this one and offered it in many flavor options.
This draw-activated disposable uses dual-mesh coils for dense clouds and even has an “Ice” cooling feature for an adjustable menthol chill. It comes in sweet, fruity flavors such as Watermelon Chew, Blue Razzberry, Miami Mint, Nana Taffy, and Grape Slush. The MVP 65K’s design is cute, with a fancied 3D-curved display panel.

Coming to the legal aspect, as with the Playoffs 50k device, the Rodman MVP 65K is fully manufactured overseas (by Chinese firm Aloha Sun), so it falls under Texas’s ban on Chinese-made disposables; hence, it is banned and illegal to carry it in Texas. Even if you find it on online retail stores, they won’t offer shipments to Texas addresses.
4. MNKE Bars XL 25K Disposable Vape
There are very few solid-built disposables as the MNKE Bars XL 25K. It is a powerful vape promising to deliver up to 25,000 puffs per device. It is powered by a 1000mAh battery and features a big screen display panel that shows you a lot of useful information about the device, such as the battery level, e-liquid level, and vaping mode.
This MNKE bar is quite large, but it still finds a way to sit in your palm comfortably for long vaping sessions. Interestingly, the vape has both 5% nicotine and 0% (nicotine-free) variants, which makes it an ideal choice for a wider range of users. Some of the popular flavors are Strawberry B-Pop, Blue Cherry Lemonade, Fresh Mint, Peach Mango Pear, and Strawberry Cake.

The legal status? Well, the MNKE Bars XL 25K is manufactured overseas, too, so it is likewise covered by the Texas ban. Texas-based vape stores have already removed MNKE Bars from their stock.
Purchasing Disposables from Outside Texas
In practice, all Chinese-made disposables have disappeared from the Texas vape marketplace, and no online retailer would want to ship to you (if you live in Texas, or your address is in Texas). But you can still buy or order US-branded disposables in Texas legally. SB 2024 penalizes the sellers, and not necessarily the buyer, and the fines are quite hefty! No retailer would want to be caught up in that web.
Conclusion
The simple advice is to stick with the likes of Fifty Bar and other US-made disposables you may f**k with; there are quite a number of them. Also, all vapes on the FDA’s whitelist are legal across the US, so you can buy them even in Texas, or outside Texas, and have it shipped to you right in Texas. You only have a problem when it’s a foreign-made vape, particularly Chinese-made.