What's Actually in ElfLiq

What’s Actually in ElfLiq: How Elf Bar Bottled Their Disposable Range 

If you used disposable vapes in the years before the UK ban, you probably had Elf Bar in your pocket at some point. The brand was everywhere. Different flavours stocked in every corner shop. Bright packaging. Sticky branding that became hard to ignore. When the disposable ban came into force in June 2025, Elf Bar’s challenge was the same as every other major disposable brand: keep the customer when the product is gone. Their answer was ElfLiq.

ElfLiq is the bottled nicotine salt version of Elf Bar’s flavour catalogue. Launched as the disposable ban was being confirmed, the range exists in 10ml bottles at standard UK nicotine salt strengths of 10mg and 20mg. The format works in any refillable pod kit on the market, which means an ex-Elf Bar disposable customer can pick up their old flavour and use it in a Hayati Pro Ultra Plus, an OXVA Xlim, or any other compatible device.

The flavour catalogue is the closest thing to a one-to-one disposable conversion any brand has managed. Blueberry Sour Raspberry, Strawberry Kiwi, Watermelon Ice, Pina Colada, Strawberry Raspberry Cherry Ice. These were all flagship Elf Bar disposable flavours and they exist in the ElfLiq range under broadly the same names. Some have been gently reformulated for the bottled format, which tends to slightly improve the flavour clarity, but the profiles are recognisable.

The range also includes a few unusual flavours that have built loyal followings. Snoow Tobacco is a menthol-tobacco hybrid that doesn’t have an obvious equivalent in other UK brands’ lineups. P.B. Cloud is a peanut butter and cream blend that sits in dessert flavour territory but has unusual depth. Gami is a sweet sour candy flavour that suits younger palates. Elfbull Ice riffs on the energy drink category. Blackcurrant Aniseed is the brand’s nod to traditional vape flavour profiles for older customers.

What ElfLiq does not include is a zero-nicotine option. The range is nicotine-only, with strengths sitting at 10mg/ml or 20mg/ml. UK regulations cap nic salts at 20mg/ml, so the high-strength option in the range is the maximum permitted. Anyone looking for nicotine-free vape liquid will need to look at shortfill ranges from other brands rather than ElfLiq.

Shane Margereson, founder of Ecigone, one of the UK’s longer-established independent vape retailers, has noted that ElfLiq has become a default landing spot for customers transitioning from disposables. The flavour familiarity matters. People who liked Elf Bar disposables don’t have to relearn what to buy. They pick up the bottled version of their old flavour, drop it into a refillable pod, and continue.

The price positioning sits in the standard mid-tier of UK 10ml nic salts. Around £3 to £5 per bottle, with most retailers running multi-buy deals that bring the per-bottle cost lower. With the October 2026 vape duty incoming, those prices will rise, but ElfLiq is in the same boat as every other 10ml brand. The relative competitiveness against rivals like Elux Liquid, Hayati and Bar Juice 5000 should hold.

For ex-disposable customers wondering whether ElfLiq is worth picking up, the practical answer is straightforward. If you used Elf Bar disposables and want the same flavours, ElfLiq is the closest match available. If you’ve moved on from those flavour profiles, there’s no special reason to choose ElfLiq over its rivals. The brand isn’t trying to be the most innovative or the most premium. It’s trying to keep its existing customer base, and twelve months on it’s done that job effectively.

What started as a regulatory challenge for a brand that was almost entirely disposable-dependent has become one of the more successful brand transitions in UK vaping. The ElfLiq range isn’t dramatic. It’s just consistent, recognisable, and broadly available. Sometimes that’s the right answer.

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