Prices are exploding, but that’s only the surface.
Every cigarette now carries a hidden tax bomb,
a political choice, and a moral verdict.
Smokers feel hunted, the State insists it’s saving lives, and borders leak cheap packs from next door.
As €20 looms on the horizon, one question tears through French socie… Continues…
Tobacco in France has become a battlefield where public health,
personal freedom, and social inequality collide. With 75–80% of the pack price going to taxes,
every increase is both a deterrent and a punishment, hitting low-income smokers hardest. A simple pack at €12.50–€13 is no longer a casual purchase; it is a monthly budget line, a source of shame for some, defiance for others.
As neighboring countries sell cigarettes for half the price, cross-border shopping and smuggling flourish, undermining the very policy meant to save lives. Yet the government presses on, linking taxes to inflation, tightening smoking bans from bars to beaches, from offices to playgrounds. Behind the statistics—75,000 deaths a year—are families, habits, and addictions that do not vanish with a decree. France’s war on tobacco is working, slowly, but it is leaving deep economic and emotional scars along the way.