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June 3, 2026
Counterfeit Cigarettes Drive EU Illicit Market Above 10% for First Time Since 2014
- Illicit cigarettes reached 10.3% of EU consumption in 2025 (41.8 billion), with an estimated €16.7 billion in lost tax revenues
- Counterfeits now lead the illicit market - accounting for 44% of EU illicit consumption (18.3 billion), up sharply year-on-year and displacing traditional East-to-West contraband flows
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Western Europe has the highest levels of illicit consumption, withFrance (41.4%),Belgium (24.8%), andthe Netherlands (22.1%) among the most impacted. InFrance alone, counterfeit volumes reached nearly 10 billion cigarettes
According to the 20th edition of the study “Illicit cigarette and heated tobacco consumption, and oral nicotine share in
Across the 38 European countries included in the study, illicit consumption reached 55.3 billion cigarettes, corresponding to an estimated €22.4 billion in state budget revenue losses.
A structural shift: from contraband flows to “closer-to-market” counterfeits
The illicit market is undergoing a fundamental transformation: “Made in EU” counterfeit cigarettes are increasingly displacing traditional East-to-West contraband flows. Supply chains are becoming faster and harder to trace, and operations are moving closer to end consumers - especially in Western European countries such as
Counterfeits have become the largest source of illicit cigarettes in the EU, reaching 18.3 billion and accounting for 44% of total illicit consumption in 2025. Counterfeit volumes increased more than 20% year-on-year, highlighting organized crime’s ability to rapidly adapt production and distribution models to reduce detection risks.
“The data is clear: counterfeits have become the primary engine of the illicit cigarette market in the EU, supported by criminal supply chains designed to bring fake products to consumers in high-value markets, undermining the European economy and fueling broader illicit activity,” said
Estimates show that Europe’s tobacco and nicotine value chain supports over 2.1 million jobs and generates €224 billion in value - comparable to the EU’s 17th largest economy. With nearly €24 billion in annual exports, it is a significant industrial ecosystem, yet increasingly affected by illicit trade amid economic uncertainty and need for competitiveness in
“Illicit trade is becoming more sophisticated, localized, and increasingly industrialized. It not only erodes legitimate business activity but also fuels criminal networks that operate with speed, scale, and impunity, discouraging investment, innovation and governments’ ability to deliver on public health and fiscal objectives,” said Yann Guérin, Group Chief Legal Officer,
Illicit consumption is increasingly concentrated in major Western European countries—most notably
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France remains Europe’s largest illicit market, at a 41.4% illicit share (20.5 billion cigarettes). Counterfeits alone accounted for almost 9.7 billion cigarettes (around 19% of total consumption).France saw the largest increase in illicit cigarette consumption acrossEurope in 2025. -
Belgium recorded an illicit share of nearly 25% (more than 2 billion cigarettes). -
The Netherlands rose above 22% illicit share (2.1 billion cigarettes), returning to levels last observed around 2006.
More broadly, six EU member states now record illicit shares above 20%, underscoring the scale and concentration of the issue. Outside the EU, the
What works: evidence-based policy, not extremes
Not all markets move in the same direction. Some countries have achieved sustained declines through a balanced policy mix combining predictable fiscal approaches, proportionate regulation, and consistent enforcement.
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Greece (14.1% illicit share; 1.9 billion cigarettes) recorded one of the largest year‑on‑year declines - 3.4 percentage points. This marks a significant shift from previous years, when illicit levels consistently remained above 20%, highlighting a notable improvement in recent performance. -
Ukraine (15.9% illicit share; 5.1 billion cigarettes) saw illicit volumes decline by nearly 1 billion cigarettes year‑on‑year. This reduction is particularly notable given the highly challenging operating and security environment, pointing to sustained enforcement efforts and market resilience.
“The lesson we derive from the situation in
“Sustained public-private collaboration, combining effective law enforcement with robust data, expertise, information sharing, and operational capabilities, is essential to help identify, investigate, and dismantle counterfeit networks and enable authorities to stay ahead of illicit operators, moving beyond reactive measures toward a more proactive, intelligence-led approach,” added Guérin.
Heated tobacco and oral nicotine products
For the second consecutive year, the report also covered illicit consumption of heated tobacco products in selected European markets. It found contraband represented 1.2% of total heated tobacco consumption—significantly lower than in cigarettes—with
While electronic heating devices are not within the scope of the study, available PMI internal analyses and third‑party research similarly indicate no meaningful presence of contraband or counterfeit activity in this category to date.
For the first time, the study also assessed oral nicotine products in selected countries. It found that in markets where nicotine pouches are banned or highly restricted, survey data indicate significant availability—often involving counterfeit, non-compliant or non-domestic products—suggesting widespread consumer access despite legal restrictions. The highest shares of products not eligible for sale—with the potential to reach a substantial number of consumers—were observed in
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As
The full study results, country profiles, detailed study methodology, and country-level findings are available here.
For more information about PMI’s illicit trade prevention efforts, visit PMI.com.
Note to editors
Definitions of illicit cigarette categories, as detailed in the
- Counterfeit: “Cigarettes that are illegally manufactured and sold by a party other than the original trademark owner.”
- Illicit whites: “Cigarettes that are usually manufactured legally in one country/market but which the evidence suggests have been smuggled across-borders during their transit to the destination market under review where they have limited or no legal distribution and are sold without payment of tax.”
- C&C: “Counterfeit and contraband, including illicit whites. Contraband refers to genuine products that have been either bought in a lower-tax country and which exceed legal border limits or acquired without taxes for export purposes to be illegally re-sold (for financial profit) in a higher priced market.”
- Other C&C: “Other C&C comprises contraband which does not fall within the Illicit Whites definition. It is often Duty Paid product from both EU27 and non-EU27 countries. There may also be counterfeit of brands that are not trademark-owned by participant manufacturers.”
- Not eligible for sale products: Products that are not eligible for sale in the market in which the product is consumed. This encompasses Non-Domestically labelled products, domestically labelled products which do not comply with regulations in the market of study, and Counterfeit products.
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260603799047/en/
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