Andrew has worked within the UK vape retail sector since 2016, building hands-on experience with a wide range of vape hardware, e-liquids and nicotine products.

As a content contributor at Vaping 101, Andrew focuses on product education, accurate hardware guidance and regulation-aware content for adult consumers. His experience covers pod kits, sub-ohm tanks, rebuildable atomisers, coil performance, nicotine salts and prefilled systems.

Working as part of a UKVIA-aligned retailer, Andrew also supports responsible product information that reflects UK TPD requirements, MHRA-notified product standards and age-restricted marketing expectations. He takes a practical, performance-led approach to vape product evaluation, looking closely at airflow, wicking, coil longevity and power delivery consistency.

How to Spot Fake Nasty Juice

Nasty Juice is one of the most counterfeited e-liquid brands in the UK. Its popularity makes it a target, and fake bottles have been found in circulation through online marketplaces, unofficial retailers, and even some bricks-and-mortar shops. The problem with counterfeit e-liquid is not just a poor vaping experience. Fake juice is produced without any quality control or safety testing, which means the contents are unknown. Before you open your next bottle, here is what to check.

Why Fake Nasty Juice Is a Genuine Concern

Unlike counterfeit hardware, fake e-liquid goes directly into your lungs. Genuine Nasty Juice is manufactured to strict standards with tested ingredients and declared PG/VG ratios. Counterfeit versions are produced with no such oversight, and the contents can include unverified flavourings, impure base ingredients, or nicotine at levels far outside what is declared on the label. The health risks are real, and the fact that fake bottles can closely resemble genuine ones makes it worth knowing the specific things to look for before vaping anything you are unsure about.

Nasty Juice 50ml Shortfill E-Liquid

Check the Scratch-and-Verify Code

Authenticity check

Every genuine bottle of Nasty Juice comes with an anti-counterfeiting verification code. On authentic products, this is a scratch-off panel on the bottle or packaging that reveals a unique code underneath. You can then verify this code on the official Nasty Juice website to confirm the product is genuine.

There are two things to watch for here. First, if the bottle has no verification code at all, that is an immediate red flag. Second, if the code appears to be printed directly onto a peel-off label rather than concealed beneath a proper scratch panel, treat the bottle with suspicion. Legitimate authentication codes are designed so that the product must be purchased and opened before the code can be checked. A code that is visible without scratching anything has likely already been copied.

Inspect the Packaging Quality

Genuine Nasty Juice bottles and boxes are produced to a consistent, high print standard. Counterfeit packaging tends to give itself away on closer inspection, even when it looks convincing at first glance. Here is what to look for:

  • Print quality. Authentic labels have sharp, clean printing. Blurred text, slightly off-colour logos, or uneven ink distribution are common signs of a fake.
  • Font accuracy. Nasty Juice uses specific typography across all its products. Counterfeit bottles often use fonts that are close but not identical, which becomes obvious when compared side by side with a genuine bottle.
  • Country of origin. Genuine Nasty Juice is manufactured in Malaysia. If you see "Made in China" printed anywhere on the bottle or under the barcode, the product is not authentic.
  • Spelling and grammar. Counterfeit labels frequently contain subtle spelling errors or awkward phrasing in the product descriptions or compliance text. Read the label carefully.
  • Safety symbols and compliance information. All genuine Nasty Juice shortfills sold in the UK carry the required TPD compliance information, including nicotine warning labels, batch numbers, and manufacturer details. Missing or incomplete regulatory information is a clear warning sign.

Check the Bottle and Cap

Beyond the label, the physical quality of the bottle itself can reveal a fake. Genuine Nasty Juice bottles have a consistent weight, sturdy plastic, and a properly fitted child-resistant cap. Counterfeit bottles are often made from thinner, cheaper plastic that feels noticeably lighter or flimsier in the hand. The cap on a fake may not fit as securely, or the child-resistant mechanism may feel loose or inconsistent compared to a genuine bottle.

If the bottle has already been opened before you bought it, that is a significant concern regardless of brand. A broken or tampered safety seal is a red flag with any e-liquid purchase.

Trust Your Senses Before You Vape

If you have already opened a bottle and something feels off, trust that instinct. Genuine Nasty Juice has a consistent, clean smell that reflects the flavour on the label. The liquid itself should be clear to lightly tinted, not cloudy or discoloured. If the smell is chemical, unusual, or completely at odds with what the label describes, do not vape it. Similarly, if the flavour on the first draw tastes wrong, flat, or chemical in a way that is unlike the genuine product, stop using it.

The soft mint finish that runs through the main Nasty Juice shortfill range is a useful reference point. If a bottle claiming to be from the main range has no mint quality at all on the exhale, it may not be what it claims to be.

Where You Buy Matters

The single most reliable way to avoid fake Nasty Juice is to buy from authorised UK retailers who source directly from the brand. Unofficial sellers on general marketplaces, social media, or discount sites with prices significantly below the standard retail price should be treated with caution. A price that looks too good to be true on a well-known brand is frequently a sign that the product is not genuine.

All Nasty Juice products at Vaping 101 are sourced directly from the brand, ensuring every bottle is authentic and TPD-compliant. If you have purchased a bottle elsewhere and want to compare it against a genuine product, the full range is available here.

Nasty Salt Nic Salts 10ml

Nasty Salt Nic Salts 10ml

Quick Comparison

CheckWhat to look forWarning signAreaRiskShop
Verification codeScratch-and-verify anti-counterfeit codeNo code or visible copied codeBottle or packagingHigh counterfeit riskNasty Juice shortfills
Packaging qualitySharp print, correct fonts and clear compliance detailsBlurred print, spelling errors or missing TPD infoLabel and boxAuthenticity checkNasty Juice
Bottle and capSturdy bottle and secure child-resistant capFlimsy plastic, loose cap or broken sealBottleSafety concernE-liquid
Authorised retailerBuy from trusted UK stockistsAvoiding marketplace and unofficial sellersPurchase sourceBest protectionNasty Juice

Frequently Asked Questions

Check for a genuine scratch-and-verify code, inspect the packaging quality, confirm the country of origin, check for correct compliance information, and make sure the bottle and cap feel secure. If anything looks, smells or tastes wrong, do not vape it.

Yes. Every genuine bottle of Nasty Juice comes with an anti-counterfeiting verification code. On authentic products, this is a scratch-off panel on the bottle or packaging that reveals a unique code underneath.

Genuine Nasty Juice is manufactured in Malaysia. If you see "Made in China" printed anywhere on the bottle or under the barcode, the product is not authentic.

Fake e-liquid is produced without proper quality control or safety testing, which means the contents are unknown. It can contain unverified flavourings, impure base ingredients, or nicotine at levels far outside what is declared on the label.

The safest option is to buy from authorised UK retailers who source directly from the brand. All Nasty Juice products at Vaping 101 are sourced directly from the brand, ensuring every bottle is authentic and TPD-compliant.

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