No, vaping while driving is not explicitly illegal for adults 21+ in New Hampshire, but it can lead to citations under distracted or careless driving laws if it impairs safe operation. Specific bans apply to minors, and general safety rules prioritize undivided attention on the road.​
Core Legal Status
New Hampshire lacks a dedicated statute banning adult vaping (21+) while driving as of March 2026. Instead, it falls under broader statutes like RSA 265:3 (careless driving) or RSA 265:4 (reckless driving), where actions like handling a vape device, refilling, or exhaling dense clouds that obstruct vision can trigger enforcement. Officers assess based on observed unsafe behavior, such as swerving or delayed reactions, rather than the act alone.
Distracted Driving Rules
Vaping qualifies as a distraction if it diverts manual, visual, or cognitive focus from driving. New Hampshire’s hands-free law (RSA 265:79-c) targets handheld electronic devices for communication or data entry—vapes do not qualify under this. Still, penalties mirror distracted driving: first offenses start at $100 fines, escalating to $250+ for repeats, with potential license points, surcharges up to $2,500, or jail for severe cases.
Age and Minor Restrictions
Possession or use of vapes by those under 21 is illegal statewide (RSA 126-K:6), including in vehicles as driver or passenger. No state law bans adults vaping with minors present—a 2024 bill (HB 1244) for under-16 passengers failed, with no updates passed by 2026. Health experts advise against secondhand aerosol exposure to kids regardless.
Cannabis Vaping Specifics
If vaping cannabis products, separate rules apply: recent proposals like HB 1633 (not yet law in March 2026) would misdemeanor-charge open use in operating vehicles, plus DUI prohibitions if impaired. Nicotine vaping remains under general tobacco-like rules without vehicle-specific cannabis bans enacted.
Penalties and Enforcement
Fines for related violations range $100–$2,500, plus points affecting insurance (up to 20–30% hikes post-citation). Accidents involving vape distraction heighten liability, potentially deeming the driver at fault and barring claims. Enforcement is discretionary—pull over safely to vape, as parked use avoids issues.
Safety and Best Practices
Vaping triples distraction risks: manual handling (like lighting a cigarette), visual glances, and cognitive focus on flavor. Exhale away from face to prevent coughs or visibility loss; thirdhand residues linger in cars. Prioritize parking for use—safer for all, avoids tickets, and complies with “safe operation” mandates.
SOURCES:
- https://ecigator.com/guide/ew-hampshire-vaping-driving-laws/
- https://www.thezebra.com/resources/driving/is-it-legal-to-smoke-or-vape-while-driving/












