Title 18 › Part PART I— - CRIMES › Chapter CHAPTER 83— - POSTAL SERVICE › § 1716E
It bans mailing cigarettes and smokeless tobacco through the U.S. mail. The Postal Service must not accept or deliver any package it knows or reasonably thinks contains those products. "Reasonable cause" includes a public statement or ad saying someone will mail them for pay, or being on the list made under the Jenkins Act. Cigars and mailings inside Alaska or inside Hawaii are not covered by the ban. There are limited exceptions with strict rules. Businesses with proper licenses can send tobacco to other licensed businesses or to government agencies if the Postmaster General issues rules within 180 days after the Prevent All Cigarette Trafficking Act of 2009; those rules must require sender and recipient verification, tracking, clear package labeling, delivery only to verified adult employees, and keeping records for 3 years. Individuals who are not minors may mail tobacco for noncommercial reasons (like returning a damaged item) under rules that include a 10-ounce weight limit, tracking, limits of 10 mailings per 30 days, and verification that sender and recipient are not minors (a minor means under the local legal tobacco age). Manufacturers may mail cigarettes for consumer testing if they have a permit, send no more than 12 packs (240 cigarettes) per package, send no more than one package per recipient per 30 days, pay required state and local taxes, follow verification and tracking rules, and stay under 1% of their prior-year U.S. cigarette sales. "Adult" for testing means at least 21 years old. Seized nonmailable tobacco can be forfeited and destroyed. Violators face seizure, a civil penalty equal to 10 times the retail value including taxes, criminal fines and/or up to 1 year in prison, and 50 percent of collected penalties go into the "PACT Postal Service Fund" for enforcement. States, local governments, and tribes that tax tobacco may sue to stop violations and recover unpaid taxes.
Full Legal Text
Crimes and Criminal Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
18 U.S.C. § 1716E
Title 18 — Crimes and Criminal Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73