Rapport
The tobacco control scale 2025 in Europe
Auteur(s) :
JOOSSENS, L. ;
ABBINK, H. ;
ROMAN, E.
Année
2026
Page(s) :
44 p.
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Éditeur(s) :
Brussels : Smoke Free Partnership
Refs biblio. :
22
Domaine :
Tabac / e-cigarette
Discipline :
SAN (Santé publique / Public health)
Thésaurus géographique
EUROPE
Thésaurus mots-clés
TABAC
;
COMPARAISON
;
POLITIQUE
;
PRIX
;
INTERDICTION DE FUMER
;
RECOMMANDATION
;
AVERTISSEMENT SANITAIRE
;
LEGISLATION
;
SEVRAGE
;
PUBLICITE
;
PAQUET NEUTRE
;
ARRET DU TABAC
Résumé :
The data used for the 2025 survey refers to legislation in force as of 1 January 2026, prices of tobacco products in 2024, and mass media campaigns conducted between July 2022 and June 2024. Any legislation, price increases, or campaigns introduced or implemented after these dates are not included.
Headline results & issues:
For the first time, more countries had a lower score in 2025 than before. Mainly two reasons: in several countries heated tobacco products were not regulated in the same way as cigarettes and secondly, cigarette prices were mostly not adapted to inflation.
11 countries increased their score since 2021. The Netherlands (+9), Slovenia (+8), Belgium (+5) and Portugal (+5) saw the strongest increases in their score. Notable positive policy developments since 2021 include a significant improvement in smokefree policy in Slovenia and Portugal, and a strengthening of price- and advertisement policies in the Netherlands and Belgium.
23 countries receive a lower score than in 2021. Romania (-25) and Italy (-15), Greece (-10) and Czechia (-9) saw the most significant declines in their score. The drops in Romania, Italy and Czechia are mainly due to the exclusion of heated tobacco products from smokefree- and/or advertisement-regulations.
Nine countries performed modestly, scoring between 50 and 54 points. The remaining 19 countries failed to reach at least 50 points and therefore need to do much more.
Eight countries (up from five in 2021) had very low scores, with fewer than 45 points. The lowest overall scores were recorded in Bosnia & Herzegovina and Switzerland.
The UK and Ireland achieved the highest cigarette price scores, while Turkey and the Russian Federation had the lowest. The period from 2020 to 2024 was marked by high inflation, and most countries did not sufficiently adjust price and/or tax levels. Turkey lost 9 points in its price score due to high inflation. Only 4 of the 37 countries improved their price scores (the Netherlands, Belgium, Slovenia, and Slovakia). This underlines the urgent need for an updated EU Tobacco Products Tax Directive including an automatic indexation mechanism. [Author's abstract]
Headline results & issues:
For the first time, more countries had a lower score in 2025 than before. Mainly two reasons: in several countries heated tobacco products were not regulated in the same way as cigarettes and secondly, cigarette prices were mostly not adapted to inflation.
11 countries increased their score since 2021. The Netherlands (+9), Slovenia (+8), Belgium (+5) and Portugal (+5) saw the strongest increases in their score. Notable positive policy developments since 2021 include a significant improvement in smokefree policy in Slovenia and Portugal, and a strengthening of price- and advertisement policies in the Netherlands and Belgium.
23 countries receive a lower score than in 2021. Romania (-25) and Italy (-15), Greece (-10) and Czechia (-9) saw the most significant declines in their score. The drops in Romania, Italy and Czechia are mainly due to the exclusion of heated tobacco products from smokefree- and/or advertisement-regulations.
Nine countries performed modestly, scoring between 50 and 54 points. The remaining 19 countries failed to reach at least 50 points and therefore need to do much more.
Eight countries (up from five in 2021) had very low scores, with fewer than 45 points. The lowest overall scores were recorded in Bosnia & Herzegovina and Switzerland.
The UK and Ireland achieved the highest cigarette price scores, while Turkey and the Russian Federation had the lowest. The period from 2020 to 2024 was marked by high inflation, and most countries did not sufficiently adjust price and/or tax levels. Turkey lost 9 points in its price score due to high inflation. Only 4 of the 37 countries improved their price scores (the Netherlands, Belgium, Slovenia, and Slovakia). This underlines the urgent need for an updated EU Tobacco Products Tax Directive including an automatic indexation mechanism. [Author's abstract]
Affiliation :
Smoke Free Partnership (SFP), Brussels, Belgium
Historique