Broken Promises to Our Children | Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids
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A State-by-State Look at the
1998 Tobacco Settlement 25 Years Later

Despite receiving nearly $26 billion from the tobacco settlement and tobacco taxes this year, the states continue to shortchange tobacco prevention and cessation programs proven to save lives and money. As tobacco use remains the number one cause of preventable death in the United States and youth e-cigarette use remains at high levels, such programs are as critical as ever.

Since the states settled their lawsuits against the major tobacco companies in 1998, our annual reports have assessed whether the states are keeping their promise to use a significant portion of their settlement funds – estimated at $246 billion over the first 25 years – to attack the enormous public health problems caused by tobacco use in the United States.

Despite receiving huge sums from the settlement and collecting billions more in tobacco taxes, the states continue to underfund programs designed to prevent kids from using tobacco products and help tobacco users quit. In the current budget year, Fiscal Year 2024, the states will collect $25.9 billion from the settlement and taxes. But they will spend just 2.8% of it – $728.6 million – on tobacco prevention and cessation programs, down from $733.1 million in FY2023. This funding amounts to less than a quarter (22%) of the total funding recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

In addition, this year, states have additional revenues that could be dedicated to tobacco prevention programs because of more than $1.1 billion in recent legal settlements with Juul for its deceptive marketing practices and its role in the youth e-cigarette epidemic. To fully undo the harm caused by Juul, states should be using this money for youth prevention efforts.

Other key findings in this report: 

  • Maine is the only state to fund tobacco prevention and cessation programs at or above the CDC-recommended levels.
  • Only 8 other states (Utah, Oklahoma, Delaware, Oregon, North Dakota, California, Hawaii and Alaska) provide more than half of the CDC-recommended funding.
  • 31 states and DC are providing less than 25% of what the CDC recommends; 19 states provide less than 10%; 10 states provide less than 5%.
  • Tobacco companies spend nearly $12 to market tobacco products for every $1 the states invest to reduce tobacco use. According to the most recent data from the Federal Trade Commission (for 2022), the major tobacco companies spend $8.6 billion a year – nearly $1 million per hour – to market cigarettes and smokeless tobacco products in the U.S.

To continue driving down tobacco use, policymakers at all levels should fully implement proven strategies. In addition to funding tobacco prevention and cessation programs, these strategies include ending the sale of all flavored tobacco products, significant tobacco tax increases, comprehensive smoke-free laws, hard-hitting mass media campaigns, and barrier-free insurance coverage for tobacco cessation treatment.

This report is issued by the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, American Heart Association, American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, American Lung Association, Americans for Nonsmokers’ Rights and Truth Initiative.

Map: State Funding for Tobacco Prevention

Click on each state to view the full data. Follow this link for information on the District of Columbia

States that are meeting CDC recommendation on tobacco prevention programs.
States that are spending 50% - 99.9% of CDC recommendation on tobacco prevention programs.
States that are spending 25% - 49.9% of CDC recommendation on tobacco prevention programs.
States that are spending 10% - 24.9% of CDC recommendation on tobacco prevention programs.
States that are spending less than 10% of CDC recommendation on tobacco prevention programs.
States that have allocated no state funds for tobacco prevention programs.

Infographics

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Last updated Jan. 10, 2024