Irish smokers buying more tobacco abroad due to ‘stark’ price differences, say retailers

The data comes from polling firm Amárach, but was commissioned by Retailers Against Smuggling (RAS), which represents small and medium-sized retailers who benefit directly from the stability of the legal tobacco industry

Irish smokers increasingly buying tobacco abroad as price gap with Spain and Europe fuels duty-free purchases

Print

PrintPrint
News

Read More:

13 May 2026

Share this post:
 

advertisement



 

Spain is biggest market for tobacco purchases, with excise duty on pack of cigarettes about €3 compared to almost €11 in Ireland, the CSNA reports.

The difference between tobacco prices paid in Ireland and those in mainland Europe is fuelling a growth in Irish consumers purchasing tobacco abroad to avoid paying excise duties, according to a retail industry body.

Spain is the biggest market for those purchasing tobacco and bringing it into Ireland (48%), followed by the UK and the Canary Islands, new data has found.

Stability in the industry

The data comes from polling firm Amárach, but was commissioned by Retailers Against Smuggling (RAS), which represents small and medium-sized retailers who benefit directly from the stability of the legal tobacco industry.

Of the 1,000 Irish adults polled as part of the research, half said they smoked.

More than one quarter (28%) said they had purchased tobacco abroad (15%) or in duty-free (21%).

RAS says the figure is growing over time due to the “stark” price gap between Irish tobacco prices and those in Europe.

The excise duty on a packet of cigarettes in Spain is about €3, compared to almost €11 in Ireland, they said.

Consequently, the cost of a packet in Ireland is more than double the European average.

In the most recent budget, the price of a packet of 20 cigarettes increased by 50 cent, bringing the price to almost €19.

The retail body said it is concerned the price differential is “fuelling both cross-border purchasing and the growing volume of tobacco products entering Ireland without Irish duty being paid”.

Benny Gilsenan of RAS said smoking rates are “no longer declining at the pace they once were, while the illicit market continues to expand”.

Figures from Revenue indicate that illegal cigarettes now account for more than a quarter of the market, representing an estimated loss to the exchequer of €590 million a year.

The group said the move to duty-free and the illicit trade is undermining the Government tax take and hurting retailers.

It called for stronger enforcement of the new Revenue rules which gave greater powers to address those who attempt to breach the limits on the amount of tobacco product individuals can purchase at duty-free or abroad.

“The new rules introduced last year are welcome, but they must be backed up with visible, targeted enforcement.”

Read more: CSNA to meet Minister for Retail and the Circular Economy, Alan Dillon TD

© 2026, ShelfLife by CSNA

 

advertisement



 
Share this post:

Read More:



Back to Top ↑

Shelflife Magazine