Title 18 › Part I— CRIMES › Chapter 83— POSTAL SERVICE › § 1716E
It makes cigarettes and smokeless tobacco illegal to send through the U.S. mail unless a narrow exception applies. The Postal Service must not accept packages it knows or reasonably believes contain cigarettes or smokeless tobacco. Cigar shipments and mailings inside Alaska or inside Hawaii are allowed. Certain business-to-business and government shipments, noncommercial returns by adults, and limited manufacturer or federal testing mailings are allowed if they follow strict rules set by the Postmaster General within 180 days after the Prevent All Cigarette Trafficking Act of 2009 became law. Those rules must include ID checks, tracking, clear labeling, recordkeeping for 3 years, delivery only to verified adult employees (not minors), weight and frequency limits for personal returns (no more than 10 ounces and no more than 10 mailings per 30 days), and limits for manufacturer test mailings (no more than 12 packs/240 cigarettes per package, one package per manufacturer per person per 30 days, all local taxes paid, recipients not charged, and manufacturers limited to mailing no more than 1% of their U.S. sales from the prior year). Federal agencies doing public-health testing follow the same rules but need not pay recipients. Tobacco seized from the mails can be forfeited and destroyed. Violators face seizure, a civil penalty equal to 10 times the retail value (including taxes), criminal fines and up to 1 year in prison, or both. Half of money collected goes to a special PACT Postal Service Fund to help enforce these rules. Minor: someone under the local legal tobacco age. Adult: someone at least 21 years old.
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 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60