↖︎ Vishal Singh
YRBS 1991–2023 · Monitoring the Future 1976–2024

The Vanishing Cigarette

In 1997, more than one in three American high schoolers smoked. Today it is one in thirty — the greatest public-health victory in the history of youth surveys. But nicotine didn’t leave the building. It changed its clothes, learned to taste like mango ice, and found the girls first.

36.4→3.5
percent of high schoolers currently smoking cigarettes, 1997 peak vs 2023
A 90% COLLAPSE
16.8%
currently vape — nearly five times the share who smoke
2023, PAST-30-DAY USE
0.5%
smoke daily today, down from 12.8% in 1999. Daily vaping is ten times more common: 5.0%
THE HABIT MIGRATED
19.5%
of girls vape vs 14.2% of boys — the first teen nicotine wave in decades led by girls
2023, CURRENT USE
01 · The crossover

One line falls for 25 years. Another erupts in five.

The CDC began tracking current cigarette use — at least one cigarette in the past 30 days — in 1991, when the answer was 27.5%. It climbed through the Joe Camel years to a 1997 peak of 36.4%, then began a descent that has never paused: master settlement, indoor-smoking bans, taxes, graphic warnings, and simple social death. By 2023 it reached 3.5%.

E-cigarettes enter the survey in 2015 already at 24% — instantly bigger than smoking. The JUUL spike pushed current vaping to 32.8% in 2019, briefly rivaling smoking’s all-time peak. Flavor restrictions, a purchase age of 21, and the pandemic cut it to about 17% — still roughly five vapers for every smoker. Combine the two products and about one senior-high student in six currently uses nicotine, a level last seen for cigarettes alone around 2009.

Current cigarette smoking vs. current vaping, 1991–2023
Cigarettes E-cigarettes / vapes Either product
FIG 1 Percent of U.S. high school students using in the past 30 days ("daily" = all 30 days). Vaping first measured in 2015; “either” available 2015 on. Survey-weighted with 95% CI bands. Source: YRBS national files.
02 · The long arc

Half a century of quitting, one senior class at a time

Monitoring the Future extends the view to 1976 and asks a broader question — has the student ever smoked a cigarette. Three out of four seniors in 1977 had. The share fell in two long waves: a slow erosion through the 80s and 90s (still 62% as late as 2000), then an accelerating collapse as the millennial and Gen-Z cohorts arrived — 42% by 2010, 24% by 2020, and 14.6% in 2024. Experimentation itself — not just habit — has become rare: a behavior that once defined American adolescence now touches one senior in seven.

Seniors who have ever smoked a cigarette, 1976–2024
Monitoring the Future, 12th grade
FIG 2 Lifetime cigarette use among U.S. 12th-graders, survey-weighted. Kish-approximate 95% CI band (design variables not in public file). 2020 is a reduced pandemic sample. Source: Monitoring the Future.
A behavior that once defined American adolescence — three seniors in four — now touches one in seven.
03 · The new face of nicotine

Girls lead, and the gap isn’t small

Cigarettes were always slightly male: at the 1997 peak, 37.7% of boys smoked against 34.7% of girls. Vaping flipped the sign and widened the gap. In 2023, 19.5% of girls currently vaped against 14.2% of boys — a five-point female lead, unprecedented in half a century of teen nicotine data. Use is broadest among White students (18.6%) but substantial in every group, from 13.4% (other races) to 16.2% (Hispanic) and 14.8% (Black students) — a flatter racial profile than cigarettes ever had.

Who vapes: current use by sex over time, and by race in 2023
Left: trend by sex. Right: 2023 by race/ethnicity.
Girls Boys 2023 by race
FIG 3 Current (past-30-day) electronic vapor product use. Survey-weighted; whiskers are 95% CIs. Source: YRBS 2015–2023.

The optimistic read: even counting every vape, teen nicotine use in 2023 sits at half its 2019 level and a fraction of the 1990s, and the deadliest delivery device in consumer history has been driven nearly to zero among minors. The cautious read: 5% of high schoolers now use nicotine daily through a product two decades too young for anyone to know its late-life bill. The cigarette took fifty years to fall. The question is whether the vape gets the same head start.