FDA Releases Raw NYTS Data Without Comment

Last week, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration released the raw data from the 2025 National Youth Tobacco Survey (NYTS), an annual, school-based survey that collects data on tobacco use among students in grades 6 through 12 across the country. Unlike previous years, the FDA released the data without comment, leaving industry members to interpret it independently.

 

The survey tracks studentstobacco behaviors, attitudes, and exposure to pro- and anti-tobacco messaging, providing nationally representative data. First conducted in 1999, it has guided youth tobacco policy and was jointly run by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention since 2012, before moving fully under FDA oversight in 2025.

 

Youth use of tobacco and nicotine has been the FDAs sole focus in its policy and decision making for so many years, with adult education programs centered on the risk continuum of these products seemingly still far off,said Laura Leigh Oyler, VP of Regulatory Affairs at Nicokick.com. Its been a big question throughout the industry as to why theyve chosen to release this data with no fanfare, and with no guidance on how to interpret it. The FDA has essentially left the industry and other stakeholders to analyze and determine the use rates on their own.

 

Altria Client Services released a high-levelsummary of the data, finding overall tobacco usage by middle and high school students declined for the third straight year, dropping to 7.5%, the lowest rate since the study became annual in 2011, and down from the all-time high of 23.3% in 2019.

 

Cigarette usage remained steady at 1.4%, while all other categories dropped from 2024, with e-cigarettes going from 5.9% to 5.2%, pouches from 1.8% to 1.7%, smokeless tobacco going from 1.2% to 0.6%, and heated tobacco products going from 0.8% to 0.7%.

 

With the continued low youth use rates, we think this is something worth celebrating,Oyler said. The data shows that targeted publichealth interventions, combined with thoughtful regulation like raising the legal age for nicotine purchases, can make a meaningful difference.

 

The law is clear: tobacco and nicotine products are strictly for adults 21 and older,said Matthew T. Sheaff, director of U.S. regulatory communications for Philip Morris International. At PMI U.S., we are committed to guarding against underage access to our products, while continuing to provide adults 21 and older with better alternatives to smoking and traditional tobacco.

 

For example, we direct our marketing to adult nicotine consumers and do not pay social media influencers to endorse our products in the U.S. This is a shared responsibilityregulators, policymakers, retailers, and manufacturers all have an important role to play.

 

With the news generally positive in terms of youth usage, Oyler suggested emphasis be given to adults 55 and older, whose smoking rates have remained mostly steady, dropping from 18.7% in 2016 to 16.7% in 2023.

 

If anything, this data raises questions less about youth access and more about what we can do to educate adults on the differences between nicotine and tobacco products, and how they can reduce their risk,Oyler said. This is the population most at risk of smoking-related disease. This is the population with the most to gain from moving away from cigarettes. And this is the population that has been historically underserved by cessation efforts and innovation.

 

To drive the next major improvement in public health, we must accelerate support for adults who smoke and ensure that they have access to better alternatives, and ultimately, better outcomes.