Tobacco & Vaping 101: Michigan

Taxpayers Protection Alliance

January 18, 2024

Lawmakers are often bombarded with misinformation on the products used by adults in their state. This annual analysis provides up-to-date data on the adults who use cigarettes and e-cigarette products in the Great Lakes State. This information aslo includes data on youth use, impacts of e-cigarettes and analyses of existing tobacco monies.

Key Points: 

  • In 2022, 1.2 million Michigan adults (15.2 percent) were currently smoking. This a 10.6 percent decrease from 2021 and represents 138.052 fewer adults smoking.
  • In 2022 (among all Michigan adults), 6.5 percent of 18- to 24-year-olds, 19.2 percent of 25–44-year-olds, 19 percent of 45–64-year-olds, and 9.8 percent of adults aged 65 years or older were currently smoking combustible cigarettes.
  • Among all adults earning $25,000 or less in 2022, 30.1 percent were currently smoking compared to only 9.7 percent of adults earning $50,000 or more.
  • Among all smoking adults in Michigan in 2022, 72.8 percent were White, 15.2 percent were Black, 5.3 percent were Multiracial (non-Hispanic), 4.8 percent were Hispanic, one percent were Asian., and less than one percent were American Indian/Alaskan Native
  • In 2022, 665,651 Michigan adults (8.4 percent) were currently using e-cigarettes. This a 14.3 percent increase from 2021 and represents 65,446 additional adults vaping.
  • Among all vaping adults in Michigan in 2022, 33.2 percent were 18 to 24 years old, 48.5 percent were 25 to 44 years old, 14.5 percent were 45 to 64 years old, and 3.7 percent were 65 years or older.
  • In 2021, for every one Michigan high school student who was smoking, more than 171 adults were currently using cigarettes.
  • In 2021, for every one Michigan high school student who was vaping, more than nine adults were currently using e-cigarettes.
  • The introduction of e-cigarettes has not led to increases in cigarette smoking, but rather, correlates with significant declines in smoking rates among young adults.
  • Between 2018 and 2022, smoking rates among Michigan adults aged 18 to 24 years old decreased by 48.4 percent.
  • Cigarette excise taxes in Michigan disproportionately impact low income and low educated persons, while failing to significantly reduce smoking rates among that class.
  • The percentage of Michigan adults earning $25,000 or less that were smoking decreased by 12.5 percent between 2004 and 2022, while the percent of adults earning $50,000 or more that were smoking decreased by 41.8 percent during the same period.
  • Among Michigan adults who did not graduate high school, smoking rates decreased by 29 percent, yet rates among adults with a college degree decreased by 46.2 percent.
  • Michigan woefully underfunds programs to prevent youth use of tobacco and/or vapor products and help adults quit smoking, while simultaneously receiving millions of dollars from the pockets of the adults who smoke. In 2022, for every $1 the state received in tobacco monies, it spent less than $0.01 on tobacco control efforts.
See the full analysis below:

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