Losing disposables doesn’t mean losing the convenience. Three types of device now do the same job legally — they just trade off ease, cost and control differently.
Quick answer: With single-use vapes banned, the legal, lower-waste replacements fall into three groups: prefilled rechargeable pod kits (closest to a disposable — buy the device once, click in 2mL pods), “0+10” instant-refill kits (a tiny pod plus a 10mL refill bottle that floods the coil in seconds), and refillable open pods (you add your own e-liquid — cheapest per puff, most control, a small learning curve). For most people coming off disposables, a prefilled or 0+10 kit is the easiest switch; refillables win on cost and flexibility. None of these is for non-smokers.
1. Prefilled rechargeable pod kits — the easy switch
This is the closest thing to a disposable that’s still legal: a small rechargeable device with pre-filled 2mL pods you snap in and replace. No e-liquid handling, no mess — you just keep the battery and buy pods. It’s the lowest-effort option and the natural first step for disposable users. The trade-off is lock-in (the pods are usually brand-specific) and a slightly higher up-front cost than a single disposable, offset quickly by cheaper refills.
Best for: people who want disposable simplicity with almost no learning curve.
2. “0+10” instant-refill kits — convenience with lower running cost
The newest category: a device that ships with little or no e-liquid plus a 10mL refill bottle that injects liquid into the coil in a second or two. It feels like a disposable to use but drops your cost-per-puff sharply, because you reuse the device and buy refill bottles. We’ve taken two of these apart to show how the refill mechanism actually works — see the Elf Bar MAX teardown and the Vaporesso DOJO 0+10 teardown, and the full 0+10 explainer. The catches: usually a proprietary bottle (brand lock-in), and the experience depends on the coil staying healthy (some kits are prone to burnt hits or leaks).
Best for: disposable users who want low cost-per-puff and big flavour choice without manual refilling.
3. Refillable open pods — cheapest and most flexible
A refillable open-pod kit lets you add any e-liquid yourself and replace just the coil. It’s the cheapest per puff by far, gives you full control over flavour and nicotine strength, and creates the least waste. The cost is a modest learning curve — priming coils, refilling, the occasional leak — and it feels least like a disposable. For why coils matter here, see why does my vape taste burnt?
Best for: people happy to spend two minutes learning the basics in exchange for the lowest cost and most freedom.
How to choose
| If you want… | Choose | Trade-off |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum simplicity | Prefilled pod kit | Brand lock-in, mid cost-per-puff |
| Disposable feel + low cost | 0+10 instant-refill kit | Proprietary bottle, coil reliability |
| Lowest cost & most control | Refillable open pod | Small learning curve |
Whichever you pick, two things hold across all of them: buy from a licensed UK retailer (avoid black-market devices that skip the safety and ingredient rules), and look for a device whose battery can be recharged and ideally removed for recycling — the feature the new rules are built around (why that matters).
FAQ
What can I use instead of a disposable vape?
Three legal options: prefilled rechargeable pod kits (easiest), “0+10” instant-refill kits (disposable feel, lower cost), and refillable open pods (cheapest, most control). All keep the battery and avoid single-use waste.
What’s the closest thing to a disposable that’s still legal?
A prefilled rechargeable pod kit — you keep the device and snap in pre-filled 2mL pods, with no e-liquid handling. “0+10” instant-refill kits are a close second.
What’s the cheapest alternative to disposables?
Refillable open-pod kits are cheapest per puff because you add your own e-liquid and only replace the coil — at the cost of a small learning curve.
Are these alternatives legal in the UK?
Yes — rechargeable, refillable kits (prefilled pods, “0+10” kits, refillable open pods) are compliant under the post-ban rules, while single-use disposables are not. They follow the same nicotine rules and are lower-waste; they remain nicotine products and aren’t for non-smokers. The main practical gain is buying compliant, licensed products instead of black-market devices.