Tasty Coffee 100ml Shortfill E-Liquid
Coffee vapes are a minority sport. Most of the UK market is fruit, sweet, menthol. Coffee sits in its own corner, and the vapers who want it have been waiting for someone to do it properly rather than just slapping a "café mocha" label on something that tastes vaguely brown and sweet. The Tasty Fruity Coffee Series is five flavours built around actual coffee profiles, each pulling the concept in a different direction. From £6.99 without nic shots up to £8.45 with three shots included, it's one of the more affordable 100ml shortfills you'll find for a speciality range like this.
The Format
100ml in a 120ml bottle. The 20ml headspace is for nicotine shots. Everything starts at 0mg base nicotine.
No shots at all sits at £6.99. Two 18mg shots brings it up slightly. Three 18mg shots takes you to £8.45 at the top end, down from the regular £8.99. Two shots into 100ml of a 120ml bottle lands at roughly 6mg across the full volume. Three shots pushes that higher. Lighter vapers who sit at 3mg or below will find two shots more than sufficient. Heavier users or people making a more serious switch from cigarettes tend to go for three.
The ratio is 70VG/30PG. High VG liquid is thick. It needs sub-ohm hardware with coils that can actually wick it properly. Pod kits, MTL tanks, pen devices with tight coils above 0.6 ohm: none of these are the right fit. A proper sub-ohm tank running mesh coils at a reasonable wattage is where this performs. Get the setup right and the vapour is warm, dense, and the coffee flavours come through with proper clarity.
The Flavours
Cappioconico is the straightest interpretation of coffee in the range. Bold, slightly bitter, recognisably espresso. Not sweetened into something unrecognisable. If you've been through half a dozen coffee vapes that tasted more like caramel than anything caffeinated, this one actually tastes like coffee. It's the benchmark for the range and the one most worth trying first if you're buying blind.
Caramel brings sweetness into the equation without abandoning the coffee base. The caramel is a modifier rather than the lead note. You're still vaping a coffee flavour, just one with a warm, golden sweetness running through it. Works well as an all-day option for vapers who find pure coffee profiles a bit much over long sessions.
Hazelnut is a combination that's been popular in coffee shops for decades because it genuinely works. The nuttiness rounds off the coffee without overpowering it. Done badly, hazelnut vapes taste like synthetic nut flavouring with nothing behind them. This one keeps the coffee prominent enough that the hazelnut feels like an addition rather than a replacement.
Mocha is coffee and chocolate, which sounds simple but requires some care to execute. The two flavours share bitter, roasted qualities that either work together or clash depending on the balance. Here they work. The chocolate is dark and rich rather than sweet, which keeps it feeling like a drink rather than a dessert vape. If you're used to chocolate vapes that lean sweet and creamy, Mocha will read differently than you might expect.
White Coffee is the lightest option in the range. Milky, soft, closer to a flat white or a latte than anything espresso-based. The coffee character is still there but filtered through something smoother and more approachable. For vapers who want to try a coffee profile without jumping straight to the more intense options, this is the sensible starting point.
Why Coffee Shortfills Are Worth Considering
The UK vape market doesn't have many good coffee options. Fruit and sweet profiles dominate because they sell well and they're forgiving to make. Coffee is harder to get right. Too much bitterness and it's unpleasant. Too little and you've just made a brown sweet. The Tasty Fruity Coffee Series gets the balance right across most of the range, particularly with Cappioconico and Mocha where the coffee actually tastes like coffee.
For vapers who have been rotating through the same fruit and sweet options for a while, a coffee range done properly is a genuine change of pace. And the pricing makes it easy to take the risk on something different. Under seven quid for 100ml base is hard to argue with.
The Value
£6.99 to £8.45 for 100ml. Even at the top end with three nic shots, you're under nine quid for 120ml of finished liquid. Compare that to buying 10ml nic salt bottles at £3 to £4 each and the saving over a month of vaping becomes fairly significant.
Made in the UK. TPD compliant. 18+ only.
Quick Specs
Volume: 100ml in a 120ml bottle. Price: £6.99 to £8.45 depending on nic shot option (was £8.99). Nicotine: 0mg base, 2 x 18mg or 3 x 18mg nic shot options. Ratio: 70VG/30PG. Made in the UK. Flavours: Cappioconico, Caramel, Hazelnut, Mocha, White Coffee.
Same-day dispatch on orders placed before 3:30pm Monday to Friday. Free delivery on orders over £40.
FAQs
- Does Cappioconico actually taste bitter like real espresso or is it sweetened? It leans toward an authentic espresso profile with a mild bitterness rather than heavy sweetness. It isn’t aggressively bitter, but it doesn’t mask the coffee character either. If you want a genuine coffee flavour instead of a sweet coffee-style vape, this fits the bill.
- I hate the smell of coffee. Will I enjoy this range? Probably not. Coffee vapes naturally carry the aroma and flavour of real coffee. If you genuinely dislike the smell or taste of coffee, this range is unlikely to change your mind. It’s designed specifically for coffee lovers.
- How does Mocha compare to a standard chocolate vape? Mocha is darker and more complex than a typical chocolate vape. The coffee element is dominant, with chocolate acting as a secondary note. If you expect something sweet and cocoa-heavy, it may surprise you. For a richer, more bitter profile, it works very well.
- Is White Coffee sweet enough to appeal to vapers who don’t usually vape coffee flavours? White Coffee is the most approachable option in the range, offering a softer, milky, latte-style flavour. While it’s more gentle than espresso-based profiles, it may still not convert those who actively dislike coffee flavours.
- Can I mix flavours together in the same tank? Yes, though results can vary. Sweeter flavours like Hazelnut and Caramel tend to work well together. Mocha mixed with Caramel becomes quite sweet quickly. Mixing can be a good way to use up remaining liquid rather than wasting it.
Original: $9.38
-70%$9.38
$2.81Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Coffee vapes are a minority sport. Most of the UK market is fruit, sweet, menthol. Coffee sits in its own corner, and the vapers who want it have been waiting for someone to do it properly rather than just slapping a "café mocha" label on something that tastes vaguely brown and sweet. The Tasty Fruity Coffee Series is five flavours built around actual coffee profiles, each pulling the concept in a different direction. From £6.99 without nic shots up to £8.45 with three shots included, it's one of the more affordable 100ml shortfills you'll find for a speciality range like this.
The Format
100ml in a 120ml bottle. The 20ml headspace is for nicotine shots. Everything starts at 0mg base nicotine.
No shots at all sits at £6.99. Two 18mg shots brings it up slightly. Three 18mg shots takes you to £8.45 at the top end, down from the regular £8.99. Two shots into 100ml of a 120ml bottle lands at roughly 6mg across the full volume. Three shots pushes that higher. Lighter vapers who sit at 3mg or below will find two shots more than sufficient. Heavier users or people making a more serious switch from cigarettes tend to go for three.
The ratio is 70VG/30PG. High VG liquid is thick. It needs sub-ohm hardware with coils that can actually wick it properly. Pod kits, MTL tanks, pen devices with tight coils above 0.6 ohm: none of these are the right fit. A proper sub-ohm tank running mesh coils at a reasonable wattage is where this performs. Get the setup right and the vapour is warm, dense, and the coffee flavours come through with proper clarity.
The Flavours
Cappioconico is the straightest interpretation of coffee in the range. Bold, slightly bitter, recognisably espresso. Not sweetened into something unrecognisable. If you've been through half a dozen coffee vapes that tasted more like caramel than anything caffeinated, this one actually tastes like coffee. It's the benchmark for the range and the one most worth trying first if you're buying blind.
Caramel brings sweetness into the equation without abandoning the coffee base. The caramel is a modifier rather than the lead note. You're still vaping a coffee flavour, just one with a warm, golden sweetness running through it. Works well as an all-day option for vapers who find pure coffee profiles a bit much over long sessions.
Hazelnut is a combination that's been popular in coffee shops for decades because it genuinely works. The nuttiness rounds off the coffee without overpowering it. Done badly, hazelnut vapes taste like synthetic nut flavouring with nothing behind them. This one keeps the coffee prominent enough that the hazelnut feels like an addition rather than a replacement.
Mocha is coffee and chocolate, which sounds simple but requires some care to execute. The two flavours share bitter, roasted qualities that either work together or clash depending on the balance. Here they work. The chocolate is dark and rich rather than sweet, which keeps it feeling like a drink rather than a dessert vape. If you're used to chocolate vapes that lean sweet and creamy, Mocha will read differently than you might expect.
White Coffee is the lightest option in the range. Milky, soft, closer to a flat white or a latte than anything espresso-based. The coffee character is still there but filtered through something smoother and more approachable. For vapers who want to try a coffee profile without jumping straight to the more intense options, this is the sensible starting point.
Why Coffee Shortfills Are Worth Considering
The UK vape market doesn't have many good coffee options. Fruit and sweet profiles dominate because they sell well and they're forgiving to make. Coffee is harder to get right. Too much bitterness and it's unpleasant. Too little and you've just made a brown sweet. The Tasty Fruity Coffee Series gets the balance right across most of the range, particularly with Cappioconico and Mocha where the coffee actually tastes like coffee.
For vapers who have been rotating through the same fruit and sweet options for a while, a coffee range done properly is a genuine change of pace. And the pricing makes it easy to take the risk on something different. Under seven quid for 100ml base is hard to argue with.
The Value
£6.99 to £8.45 for 100ml. Even at the top end with three nic shots, you're under nine quid for 120ml of finished liquid. Compare that to buying 10ml nic salt bottles at £3 to £4 each and the saving over a month of vaping becomes fairly significant.
Made in the UK. TPD compliant. 18+ only.
Quick Specs
Volume: 100ml in a 120ml bottle. Price: £6.99 to £8.45 depending on nic shot option (was £8.99). Nicotine: 0mg base, 2 x 18mg or 3 x 18mg nic shot options. Ratio: 70VG/30PG. Made in the UK. Flavours: Cappioconico, Caramel, Hazelnut, Mocha, White Coffee.
Same-day dispatch on orders placed before 3:30pm Monday to Friday. Free delivery on orders over £40.
FAQs
- Does Cappioconico actually taste bitter like real espresso or is it sweetened? It leans toward an authentic espresso profile with a mild bitterness rather than heavy sweetness. It isn’t aggressively bitter, but it doesn’t mask the coffee character either. If you want a genuine coffee flavour instead of a sweet coffee-style vape, this fits the bill.
- I hate the smell of coffee. Will I enjoy this range? Probably not. Coffee vapes naturally carry the aroma and flavour of real coffee. If you genuinely dislike the smell or taste of coffee, this range is unlikely to change your mind. It’s designed specifically for coffee lovers.
- How does Mocha compare to a standard chocolate vape? Mocha is darker and more complex than a typical chocolate vape. The coffee element is dominant, with chocolate acting as a secondary note. If you expect something sweet and cocoa-heavy, it may surprise you. For a richer, more bitter profile, it works very well.
- Is White Coffee sweet enough to appeal to vapers who don’t usually vape coffee flavours? White Coffee is the most approachable option in the range, offering a softer, milky, latte-style flavour. While it’s more gentle than espresso-based profiles, it may still not convert those who actively dislike coffee flavours.
- Can I mix flavours together in the same tank? Yes, though results can vary. Sweeter flavours like Hazelnut and Caramel tend to work well together. Mocha mixed with Caramel becomes quite sweet quickly. Mixing can be a good way to use up remaining liquid rather than wasting it.
