
My mother smoked two packs a day while pregnant with me in Canada in the 1970s. It was normal then. Doctors didn’t panic, they smoked beside their patients and left ashtrays in the waiting room. My parents smoked in the car, windows closed, despite my protest. Entire generations inhaled smoke before they could walk.
Today, Britain is attempting something that would have seemed unthinkable back then. Lawmakers have passed legislation designed to create a “smoke-free generation,” meaning that people who are currently children will never legally be able to purchase tobacco if the policy remains in place. They have started by promoting that sales of tobacco will be banned to anyone born after 2008.
The law works by raising the legal age for buying tobacco by one year every year. This means that those who are under the legal age today will not grow into eligibility later. The policy has passed through Parliament and is moving through the final stages required to become law. These laws could explain why tobacco companies have started investing in cannabis instead.
The aim is to gradually phase out smoking in the UK, where tobacco use still causes tens of thousands of deaths annually.

The scope of the law includes all tobacco products, including cigarettes, cigars, and loose tobacco. Vaping is not banned under the same framework, but it is being increasingly regulated, with separate measures tightening controls on marketing, flavors, and youth access. The UK government has also proposed restrictions on disposable vapes as part of a broader effort to reduce nicotine use among young people.
The cultural implications are more complex when it comes to practices such as shisha, also known as hookah or nargila, which are common in parts of the Middle East and among Arab communities globally. When tobacco is involved, these practices fall under existing tobacco regulations, meaning the same age-based restrictions would apply.
Cannabis is not included in this legislation and is governed under separate laws.
Britain is among the first countries to pursue a generational approach to tobacco control, although similar ideas have been discussed or proposed elsewhere. New Zealand previously passed a comparable policy but later reversed it before implementation, highlighting the political challenges of sustaining such measures over time.

The scientific evidence around smoking behavior suggests that restricting access can reduce uptake, particularly among young people, but it is not the only factor. Research indexed in PubMed and across public health studies has shown that early exposure, peer influence, stress, and social environment all play significant roles in whether individuals begin and continue smoking.
What Britain is attempting is not only a public health intervention but also a cultural shift. It is testing whether a habit that was once deeply embedded in daily life can be gradually removed through policy.

The change from my mother’s generation to today reflects a profound shift in how risk and health are understood. What was once widely accepted is now increasingly restricted and discouraged.
Children growing up under this framework may never encounter smoking as a normal part of adult life, at least in legal terms.
Whether the law achieves its intended outcome will depend not only on enforcement but on whether social norms continue to move in the same direction.
The ambition is clear. It is not simply to reduce smoking rates but to make smoking obsolete over time.
