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NY · Northeast · 10 packs (200 cigs) per carton · 2026

How Much Is a Carton of Cigarettes in New York?

A carton of cigarettes in New York costs $128.50+31% above the US average. Each carton contains 10 packs (200 cigarettes), including $1.01 federal tax and $5.35 New York state tobacco tax per pack. New York City adds $1.50 more per pack locally. A pack-a-day smoker buys ~36.5 cartons per year at $$4,690.

#1 most expensive of 51 jurisdictions · #1 in the Northeast · 10% of adults smoke

Your daily cost
$0.00

at 20 cigarettes a day · $12.85 per pack · New York

LiveSince you landed:$0burned
Yearly
$4,690
10 years
$46,903
30 years
$140,708
If invested at 7%
$69,339

What if you invested it instead?

30-year growth · $4,690/year at 7%

compounded annually
$0k$111k$222k$332k$443k
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New York ranks #1 out of 51 US jurisdictions for carton prices, making it one of the most expensive states for cigarettes. New York's state tobacco tax of $5.35/pack is significantly above the $2.05 national average, which drives carton prices higher than most other states. Pennsylvania and New Jersey have lower carton prices than New York, while all other neighboring states have higher prices. A pack-a-day smoker in New York spends about $4,690 per year on cartons — roughly $1,102 more than the national average smoker.

Cost breakdown

Carton cost breakdown for New York.

Every number that matters — what you spend on cartons at New York prices, from per-carton to lifetime.

Per carton
$128.50

10 packs, 200 cigarettes

Per pack
$12.85

$5.35 state tax

Yearly (1 pk/day)
$4,690

~36.5 cartons

30-year total
$140,708

Before compounding

Weekly (7 packs)
$90
Monthly carton cost
$391

~3.0 cartons/month

New York City local tax impact

New York City adds $1.50 per pack ($15.00 per carton) on top of $New York's $$5.35 state tax. A carton in New York City costs approximately $$143.50 vs. $$128.50 at the state average.New York City pack-a-day smokers pay an extra $$548 per year in local taxes alone.

Neighbor comparison

New York carton prices vs. neighboring states.

Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Vermont have cheaper cartons than New York. Could crossing the border save you money?

Cheaper than New York
  1. 1. Pennsylvania — save $37.50/carton$91.00
  2. 2. New Jersey — save $36.00/carton$92.50
  3. 3. Vermont — save $26.00/carton$102.50
  4. 4. Massachusetts — save $23.00/carton$105.50
  5. 5. Connecticut — save $18.50/carton$110.00

Crossing into Pennsylvania saves ~$$1369/year on cartons for a pack-a-day smoker.

How it compares

New York vs. the rest of the country.

Where New York sits in the national carton price ranking, from the cheapest to the most expensive state.

5 cheapest states for cartons

  1. 1. Missouri$52.10
  2. 2. Georgia$56.70
  3. 3. Alabama$58.50
  4. 4. Virginia$58.50
  5. 5. Mississippi$59.50

5 most expensive states for cartons

  1. 1. New York$128.50
  2. 2. District of Columbia$115.00
  3. 3. Rhode Island$112.00
  4. 4. Connecticut$110.00
  5. 5. Massachusetts$105.50

Carton of cigarettes in New York — frequently asked questions

A carton of cigarettes in New York costs $128.50 on average as of 2026. This includes 10 packs (200 cigarettes total) — each pack holds 20 cigarettes. The price you pay includes the $1.01 federal excise tax per pack, $5.35 in New York state excise tax per pack, and applicable state and local sales taxes. In New York City, local taxes add $1.50 per pack ($15.00 per carton), making actual carton prices higher than the state average. For comparison, the US national average carton price is $98.30. New York's carton price is +31% above the US average of that average. Individual store prices vary — call retailers near you for today's exact carton price.
As of 2026, a carton costs $128.50 in New York. This price has been affected by several factors: the $1.01 federal excise tax (unchanged since 2009), New York's $5.35 per-pack state tobacco tax, and any local city or county taxes. New York's tobacco tax is above the $2.05 national average for state taxes, which pushes carton prices above most other states. Cigarette carton prices in New York have risen over time primarily due to tax increases enacted at the state level. For today's exact carton price, call your nearest retailer — prices can vary by $2–$6 between stores in the same city.
At $128.50 per carton, a pack-a-day smoker in New York buys approximately 36.5 cartons per year. The math: 365 packs per year divided by 10 packs per carton equals 36.5 cartons annually. At New York's prices, that is $4,690 per year at the register. Breaking it down further: roughly $391 per month on cartons, or $90 per week on packs. Over 30 years at today's prices (without accounting for future tax increases or inflation): $140,708. If that money were invested at a 7% annual return instead of spent on cartons, the compound growth would be substantially higher. Use our free quit-smoking calculator at quitsmokingcalc.com to see your personalized savings projection based on how much you actually smoke and what you pay.
Buying by the carton is cheaper than buying 10 individual packs, but the savings are modest. At $12.85 per pack in New York, 10 individual packs would cost $128.50. Most retailers offer a $1–5 discount on cartons compared to buying packs individually, which translates to $0.10–0.50 off per pack. Over a year, a pack-a-day smoker who always buys cartons instead of single packs saves roughly $35–$180 in carton discounts. The savings vary by store — Walmart and warehouse clubs tend to offer the best per-carton discounts, while gas stations and convenience stores offer the smallest (or none at all). To find the best carton deal in New York, call several stores and ask for their carton price and whether they offer any additional carton discounts or promotions.
In general, Walmart, Sam's Club, and other wholesale clubs tend to offer the most competitive cigarette carton prices in most areas of New York. These retailers leverage bulk purchasing to keep prices low, though they do not publish cigarette prices online. Walgreens, CVS, and major grocery store chains are typically mid-range — slightly more expensive than Walmart but less than convenience stores. Gas stations and corner convenience stores generally charge the highest per-carton markups because they price for convenience, not value. If you live near the New York border, check carton prices across state lines. A carton in neighboring Pennsylvania costs $91.00 based on that state's lower average pack price of $9.10. Crossing the border can reduce your carton cost by $37.50 per carton — or $1,369 per year for a pack-a-day smoker.
Pennsylvania has lower carton prices at $91.00 per carton ($9.10 per pack). New Jersey has lower carton prices at $92.50 per carton ($9.25 per pack). Vermont has lower carton prices at $102.50 per carton ($10.25 per pack). Massachusetts has lower carton prices at $105.50 per carton ($10.55 per pack). Connecticut has lower carton prices at $110.00 per carton ($11.00 per pack). The difference adds up: buying in Pennsylvania instead of New York saves $37.50 per carton, which works out to roughly $1,369 per year for a pack-a-day smoker. The price differences between states are driven by tobacco tax policy. New York charges $5.35/pack in state excise tax. The lowest-tax neighboring state charges $2.60/pack — a tax gap of $2.75 per pack that flows directly into the carton price difference.
Based on New York's average pack price of $12.85 plus an estimated 3% brand premium for Marlboro, a Marlboro carton in New York costs approximately $132.35. This estimate covers standard Marlboro varieties: Red (full flavor), Gold (formerly Lights), Menthol, and most other variants. Specialty varieties like Marlboro Black, NXT, Southern Cut, and 27 Blend may carry an additional $0.10–0.30 per pack ($1–3 per carton). Marlboro is manufactured by Philip Morris USA and is the best-selling cigarette brand in America. The 3% premium over local market averages reflects Marlboro's position as the category pricing leader. See our dedicated Marlboro carton prices page (marlboro-carton-prices) for a full state-by-state Marlboro carton price comparison.
Based on New York's average pack price of $12.85 plus an estimated 2% brand premium for Newport, a Newport carton in New York costs approximately $131.07. This estimate covers Newport Menthol (the signature green pack), Newport 100s, Newport Red (non-menthol), and Newport Platinum. Newport is the #1 menthol cigarette brand in America and the second-best-selling cigarette brand overall. The estimated 2% premium places Newport slightly below Marlboro in pricing. Actual Newport carton prices at retail vary by store — call local retailers and ask specifically for Newport carton pricing. See our dedicated Newport carton prices page (newport-carton-prices) for a full state-by-state breakdown.
The US national average carton price is $98.30 (based on the $9.83 average pack price). New York's carton price of $128.50 is +31% above the US average of the national average. This means a pack-a-day smoker in New York pays roughly $1,102 more per year compared to the average American smoker. The gap is almost entirely attributable to New York's state tobacco tax policy. New York charges $5.35/pack in state excise tax, compared to the $2.05 national average state tax. The federal tax of $1.01/pack is the same everywhere, so differences between states are purely a function of state and local government policy choices.
Walmart does not publish cigarette prices online, and carton prices at Walmart vary by store location within New York. Walmart's cigarette pricing is influenced by the same factors as every other retailer in New York: the $5.35/pack state tobacco tax, any local city or county taxes, and the wholesale cost from distributors. While Walmart is often competitively priced, there is no guarantee that your local Walmart is the cheapest option. To find the exact carton price at Walmart in New York, call the store's tobacco counter directly and ask for the current carton price for your preferred brand. Sam's Club (a Walmart-owned warehouse club) also sells cartons at most locations — call their tobacco counter as well for comparison pricing.
Buying cigarettes online for delivery to New York is significantly restricted by federal law. The Prevent All Cigarette Trafficking (PACT) Act of 2009 (15 U.S.C. § 375 et seq.), amended in 2020 to include e-cigarettes, requires online and mail-order cigarette sellers to register with federal and state authorities, collect and remit all applicable taxes, verify buyer age at purchase and delivery, and comply with all state and local laws governing tobacco sales. These requirements are burdensome enough that most major online retailers simply do not ship cigarettes to individual consumers. As a practical matter, the most reliable way to buy cartons in New York is at a physical retail location. If you plan to travel internationally, duty-free shops at US airports sell tax-free cartons to departing travelers, with a limit of 200 cigarettes (one carton) allowed duty-free on return to the US.
Cigarette carton prices in New York are determined by four factors. First, the manufacturer's base price — roughly $5–7 per pack before taxes, set by Philip Morris (Marlboro), R.J. Reynolds (Newport, Camel), and other producers. This component is similar across all states. Second, the federal excise tax of $1.01/pack — a flat rate that applies equally in New York and every other state. Third, New York's state excise tax of $5.35/pack — significantly above the $2.05 national average, which is the single biggest factor making New York carton prices higher than most states. Fourth, local taxes: New York City adds an additional $1.50/pack, making cartons more expensive in the city than in rural New York.
Call the national quitline at 1-800-QUIT-NOW for free, confidential smoking cessation support available to New York residents. Visit smokefree.gov for free quit-planning tools, text-message support, and connections to local programs. Quitting saves a pack-a-day smoker in New York approximately $4,690 per year. Use our free quit-smoking calculator at quitsmokingcalc.com to see your personalized savings projection.
Sourced fromCDC·WHO·NHS·American Lung Association