<P> Denmark: Advertising is restricted . The Danish Medicines Agency classifies e-cigarettes containing nicotine as medicinal products . Thus, authorization is required before the product may be marketed and sold, and no such authorization has currently been given . The agency has clarified, however, that e-cigarettes that do not administer nicotine to the user, and are not otherwise used for the prevention or treatment of disease, are not considered medicinal devices . </P> <P> Estonia: The Estonian State Agency of Medicines had previously banned e-cigarettes, but the ban was overturned in court on 7 March 2013 . Currently e-liquids containing more than 0.7 mg / ml of nicotine are still considered medicine and as such cannot be legally purchased within the country due to no manufacturer being licensed properly . Following the outcome of EU tobacco directive in October 2013, the legislation is moving towards a more relaxed stance on the issue . As stated by the Estonian minister of social affairs Taavi Rõivas (in charge of tobacco regulation), e-cigarettes will receive an advertisement ban and will clearly be banned for minors but will be available for adults before the end of 2013 . </P> <P> Finland: The National Supervisory Authority of Welfare and Health (Valvira) declared that the new tobacco marketing ban (effective 1 January 2012) would also cover e-cigarettes, resulting in that Finnish stores or web stores can't advertise e-cigarettes because they might look like regular cigarettes . In theory, e-cigarettes with nicotine - free cartridges may still be sold, as long as their images and prices are not visible . Ordering from abroad remains allowed . Sale of nicotine cartridges is currently prohibited, as nicotine is considered a prescription drug requiring an authorization that such cartridges do not yet have . However, the Finnish authorities have decided that nicotine cartridges containing less than 10 mg nicotine, and e-liquid containing less than 0.42 g nicotine per bottle, may be legally brought in from other countries for private use . If the nicotine content is higher, a prescription from a Finnish physician is required . From a country within the European Economic Area a maximum of one year's supply may be brought in for private use when returning to Finland, while three months' supply may be brought in from outside the EEA . Mail - order deliveries from EEA countries, for a maximum of three months' supply, are also allowed . </P> <P> France: The sales of e-cigarettes or machines that imitate smoking, as well as the sale of cartridges containing or not containing nicotine, are prohibited to people under 18 years of age . The e-cigarettes are considered neither as a medical device nor as a medicine, according to a 2011 opinion of the National Agency for the Safety of Medicines and Health Products (ANSM), if it is not claimed by its sellers as a smoking cessation product, if the level and amount of nicotine do not exceed the thresholds of (20 mg / ml) and 10 mL respectively . In January 2017, the French Health Law transposing the European Directive on Tobacco Products came into force and establishes a list of places where smoking is prohibited . Offenders are liable to a fine of 150 euros or more . The persons responsible for the places where the prohibition applies and who have not put in place the signage will be fined 450 euros . </P>

Is it illegal for a 16 year old to have a vape