Every summer brings a fresh wave of e-liquid releases, and few brands generate as much chatter among UK vapers as Vaporesso. The brand has spent years building a reputation for dependable hardware, and its DOJO e-liquid line has quietly become one of the more talked-about pod and bottle ranges on British shelves. With warmer months on the way, attention naturally turns to what the season has in store, and the new Vaporesso DOJO flavours for summer 2026 are exactly the kind of thing flavour-chasers like to plan around. In this guide we walk through what DOJO is, why summer ranges matter, the flavour families you can expect to see, how to pick the right one for you, and how to get the most out of every bottle or pod. Everything here is written for over-18s in the UK, with the rules and quirks of the British market front and centre.
What is Vaporesso DOJO?
Vaporesso is one of the larger names in the global vaping world, and most people first encounter the brand through its hardware. Devices such as the XROS pod range have travelled far and wide, earning a following among people who want a tidy, pocketable kit that simply works. DOJO is the brand's e-liquid effort, and it sits alongside the hardware as a way to round out the experience. Rather than asking you to hunt around for a juice that suits a particular pod, the idea is to offer a coordinated range that pairs neatly with refillable kits.
The DOJO name covers a spread of flavours designed for the kind of low-power, mouth-to-lung style of vaping that pod kits encourage. That matters because the flavour engineering behind a juice meant for a small coil and a tight draw is different from the engineering behind a big sub-ohm cloud liquid. DOJO blends tend to be tuned so that the taste comes through clearly at modest wattages, which is exactly where most pod users live. If you have ever tried a liquid built for huge clouds in a tiny pod and found it muted or harsh, you will understand why a range built specifically for smaller devices can feel like a better fit.
In the UK, the DOJO range follows the same rules every other e-liquid follows. Bottles are capped at 10ml, nicotine strength tops out at 20mg per millilitre, and prefilled pods are limited to 2ml. These are not Vaporesso quirks; they are the legal framework that governs every nicotine-containing vape product sold to British consumers. It means that whatever clever flavour work goes into a DOJO blend, the format you buy it in will look familiar: a small bottle of liquid you decant into a refillable pod, or a small prefilled pod that clips into a compatible device.
Where DOJO sits in the wider range
It helps to think of DOJO as the flavour partner to Vaporesso's kits rather than a standalone juice brand competing on the open shelf. Many people who buy into the Vaporesso ecosystem treat the e-liquid line as a convenient default, knowing it has been designed with their device in mind. That does not mean you are locked in; refillable kits happily accept any compatible liquid, and plenty of DOJO fans mix and match with other brands. But the appeal of a coordinated range is real, especially for newer vapers who would rather not spend an afternoon researching which juice works best in which coil.
The other thing worth knowing is that DOJO, like most modern pod-focused lines, leans heavily on nicotine salt formulations. We will come back to nic salts in detail later, but the short version is that they are designed to deliver nicotine smoothly at higher strengths, which suits the low-power devices DOJO is built around. Some flavours may also appear in freebase form for people who prefer a different feel, and understanding the difference is one of the more useful things a vaper can learn. If you want a broader primer on the hardware side of things, our Vaporesso XROS review covers the kit that pairs most naturally with this range.
Why summer flavours are a big deal
Seasonal flavour ranges are not just marketing theatre. There is a genuine logic to why brands push fruit, ice and refreshing blends as the weather warms up, and it has as much to do with how we taste as it does with how we shop. When the temperature climbs, palates tend to gravitate towards lighter, brighter, more thirst-quenching profiles. The heavy custards and dense tobacco blends that feel cosy in winter can feel cloying in July. A crisp watermelon, a sharp citrus or a cool menthol simply lands differently in the heat, and brands know it.
There is also a practical dimension. Summer is when people are out and about, travelling, spending time outdoors and socialising. A pod kit loaded with a refreshing flavour fits that lifestyle in a way a fussier setup does not. Refillable pods are easy to top up before a day out, and a bright summer flavour suits the mood. That is partly why brands time their most adventurous fruit and ice releases for the warmer months, and why a phrase like new Vaporesso DOJO flavours starts trending the moment the clocks change.
The psychology of a refreshing vape
Cooling sensations deserve a special mention. The menthol and "ice" effect that runs through so many summer liquids is not really about flavour at all; it is about a physical sensation of coolness on the inhale. That sensation can make a fruit taste seem crisper and more refreshing even when the underlying fruit profile is identical. It is the same trick a glass of iced lemonade plays compared with a warm one. In summer, that cool hit is exactly what a lot of vapers are chasing, which is why ice and menthol variants tend to dominate seasonal ranges.
None of this is to say summer flavours are objectively better. Plenty of people vape the same trusted blend all year round and never feel the urge to switch. But for those who enjoy matching their vape to the season, a summer range is a chance to experiment with something lighter and livelier. And because UK bottles are small and relatively affordable, trying a new flavour is a low-commitment way to keep things interesting without overhauling your whole setup.
How seasonality shapes a range
When a brand builds a summer line-up, it is making educated guesses about what people will reach for over the next few months. That usually means leaning into the families that perform well in the heat and trimming back the ones that do not. Expect more fruit, more ice, more sour and tropical notes, and fewer of the rich bakery and dessert profiles that shine in colder weather. It does not mean dessert flavours vanish; a sweet, creamy option still has a place for people who want it. But the balance shifts, and the headline releases tend to be the bright, refreshing ones.
The summer 2026 flavour families to expect
Now to the part most readers came for. Below we walk through the flavour families that typically define a summer e-liquid range, with descriptions of the taste profiles you can expect within each. A note on honesty before we begin: flavour line-ups change from season to season, and the exact named products in any given range can shift without much warning. Rather than pretend to list precise SKUs we cannot verify, we have described the families and the kinds of profiles that sit within them. That way, whatever the final summer 2026 selection looks like on the shelf, you will know how to read it and what to expect from each style. You can always check the current selection on our e-liquids page for what is actually in stock.
Fruit blends
Fruit is the backbone of almost every summer range, and for good reason. It is the most versatile, most approachable and most universally liked family of flavours in vaping. Within the fruit category you will find a spread that runs from single-fruit purity to layered tropical mixes.
At the simpler end, expect clean single-fruit profiles. A ripe strawberry blend aims to capture the soft, jammy sweetness of the fruit at its peak, without the artificial sharpness that cheaper strawberry liquids sometimes carry. A watermelon profile leans into that watery, mild sweetness that makes the fruit so refreshing, often with a faint candied edge to give it presence on the inhale. Apple blends can go two ways: a crisp green apple that brings a tart, almost fizzy brightness, or a softer red apple that is rounder and sweeter. Mango is a perennial summer favourite, prized for its thick, juicy, almost creamy character that fills the mouth.
Move into the layered end of the fruit family and things get more interesting. Tropical blends combine several fruits to build something that tastes like a holiday in a bottle. A typical tropical mix might marry mango, pineapple and passionfruit, each contributing a different facet: the mango brings body, the pineapple brings tang, and the passionfruit brings that distinctive floral-sour top note. Pineapple on its own is worth singling out, because a good pineapple profile balances sweetness against a sharp, almost prickly acidity that feels genuinely thirst-quenching. Peach blends, meanwhile, offer a softer, fuzzier sweetness that works beautifully on its own or paired with a cooling note.
The reason fruit dominates summer is that it scales so well with the cooling and sour notes we will come to shortly. A plain mango is lovely; a mango with a touch of ice becomes a different beast entirely. That flexibility is exactly why fruit forms the foundation that the rest of a summer range is built on.
Ice and menthol
If fruit is the backbone of summer, ice is its defining seasonal twist. The ice and menthol family is where a range earns its summer credentials, and it tends to take two forms: pure menthol and "iced" fruit.
Pure menthol is the classic. It delivers a sharp, clean, cooling rush with a slightly minty edge, and for some vapers nothing else will do in the heat. A well-made menthol is bracing without being overwhelming, leaving a crisp finish that resets the palate between draws. It is the vaping equivalent of a cold flannel on a hot day: simple, direct and effective.
The more popular summer expression, though, is the iced fruit. Here a fruit base is paired with a cooling agent to create a blend that tastes of the fruit on the inhale and finishes with a cool wash on the exhale. The combinations are almost endless. Iced watermelon takes that already-refreshing fruit and amplifies it. Iced mango adds a crisp edge to the fruit's natural richness, cutting through the sweetness so it never feels heavy. Berry and ice pairings are especially common because the tartness of berries plays so well against the cool finish. Even citrus benefits: an iced lemon or lime can taste almost like a frozen sorbet.
It is worth understanding the difference between menthol and the broader "ice" or "koolada" style cooling. Menthol carries its own minty flavour alongside the cooling effect, whereas the cooling agents used in many iced fruit blends aim to deliver the chill without adding a minty taste. That distinction matters if you love the cool sensation but dislike the taste of mint, because an iced fruit without menthol gives you the refreshment without the toothpaste note. When you are reading a summer range, knowing whether a flavour uses menthol or a flavourless cooling agent tells you a lot about how it will taste.
Berry and sour
The berry and sour family is where summer ranges get playful. Berries bring a natural tartness that brighter, sweeter fruits often lack, and that tartness is the perfect launchpad for sour profiles that wake up the palate.
On the berry side, expect blends built around blackcurrant, blueberry, raspberry and mixed berry medleys. Blackcurrant deserves a particular nod because it is something of a national favourite in Britain, where it underpins everything from cordials to sweets. A blackcurrant vape captures that deep, slightly jammy, tart-sweet character that feels instantly familiar to UK palates. Blueberry brings a softer, rounder sweetness with a gentle skin-like tartness, while raspberry is brighter and sharper, with an almost floral edge. Mixed berry blends combine these to build a fuller, more rounded fruit experience that avoids leaning too hard on any single note.
Then there is the sour subfamily, which is where things get genuinely fun. Sour blends take a fruit base and crank up the acidity to deliver a tongue-tingling sharpness on the inhale, usually followed by a sweeter finish so the overall experience is balanced rather than punishing. Think of the sour sweets you might have eaten as a teenager: a sharp hit that mellows into sweetness. A sour apple, sour cherry or sour berry blend captures that arc. These are not for everyone; the initial sharpness can be intense, and people who prefer mellow, rounded flavours may find them too aggressive. But for vapers who like a bit of bite, sour blends are some of the most characterful liquids in any summer range.
Berry and sour profiles also pair brilliantly with ice, which is why you will often see them combined. A sour blue raspberry with a cooling finish is practically a summer cliché at this point, and it endures because it works. The tartness, the sweetness and the chill stack into something genuinely moreish.
Drinks and sweets
The final major family covers drink-inspired and sweet-inspired blends, and it is the most eclectic of the lot. These flavours aim to recreate the taste of familiar beverages and confectionery, and they offer a change of pace from straightforward fruit.
Drink-inspired blends are a natural summer fit because so many of the drinks we associate with the season translate beautifully into vape form. A cola profile captures that sweet, slightly spiced fizz, sometimes with a cooling note to mimic the sensation of an ice-cold can. Lemonade and traditional lemon-lime blends are summer staples, balancing citrus sharpness against sweetness. Energy-drink-inspired flavours have become hugely popular, recreating that distinctive sweet-tart, slightly synthetic profile that so many people recognise. Tropical punch and fruit-cocktail blends sit here too, blurring the line between the fruit and drink families with their layered, juice-like character.
On the sweet and confectionery side, expect blends inspired by sweets, sorbets and softer desserts. A sorbet or slushie profile pairs fruit with a sugary, slightly icy sweetness that feels indulgent without being heavy. Bubblegum and candy blends recreate the nostalgic, sugary taste of childhood sweets, often with a bright fruit core. Some ranges include softer dessert notes such as a fruit-and-cream pairing, where a tart fruit is rounded out with a smooth, creamy base. These tend to be lighter than the heavy custards of winter, keeping them summer-appropriate while still scratching the dessert itch.
The drinks and sweets family is where personal taste really comes into play. Some vapers adore them and keep a cola or energy-drink blend in permanent rotation; others find them too sweet for all-day use and treat them as an occasional change. Because UK bottles are small, they are an easy, low-cost way to experiment without committing to a flavour you might tire of.
How the families work together
One of the more useful ways to think about a summer range is not as a list of individual flavours but as a set of building blocks. Fruit forms the base. Ice sharpens and refreshes it. Sour adds bite. Sweet rounds it out. Drink-inspired blends remix the whole thing into something familiar and fun. The best summer line-ups offer enough variety across these families that you can build a small personal rotation: maybe a clean fruit for the morning, an iced blend for a hot afternoon, and a sweet or drink-inspired option for the evening. That kind of variety is exactly what a well-rounded seasonal range is meant to deliver.
How to choose your summer flavour
With so many families and so many profiles, picking a flavour can feel daunting, especially if you are new to vaping or new to the DOJO range. The good news is that a few simple questions will narrow things down quickly. The goal is to match a flavour to your palate, your device and your habits, rather than chasing whatever happens to be trending.
Start with what you already enjoy
The single most reliable guide to choosing a vape flavour is your existing taste in food and drink. If you reach for tart, sharp drinks and love sour sweets, the berry and sour family is a sensible starting point. If you have a sweet tooth and gravitate towards puddings and confectionery, the drinks and sweets family will probably suit you. If you simply want something clean and refreshing that you can vape all day without it becoming overwhelming, a single fruit or a light iced fruit is hard to beat. There is no need to overthink it; your everyday preferences are a remarkably good predictor.
Decide how much cooling you want
Cooling is the variable that catches a lot of people out. Some vapers love a heavy ice hit and find anything else flat; others dislike menthol intensely and want pure fruit. If you are unsure, start with a mild or non-iced version of a flavour you like, and add ice into your rotation later if you find yourself wanting more refreshment. It is much easier to build up to cooling than to discover you have bought a bottle that is too bracing to enjoy. Remember too the distinction between menthol-based cooling, which adds a minty taste, and flavourless cooling agents, which add the chill without the mint.
Think about all-day versus occasional use
Not every flavour is suited to all-day vaping. Intensely sweet or sour blends can be wonderful in short bursts but fatiguing if they are the only thing you vape. Many experienced vapers keep a mild, clean flavour as their "all-day vape" and reserve the bolder, sweeter or more sour options for variety. If you are buying a single bottle to be your main liquid, lean towards something balanced. If you are building a small collection, that is the time to add the more characterful options.
Consider your strength alongside your flavour
Flavour and nicotine strength interact more than people expect. Higher nicotine strengths, particularly in nic salt form, can slightly mute certain delicate flavours and add a faint background note of their own. If you are vaping at 20mg you may find very subtle profiles harder to appreciate than bold, sweet or sour ones. This is one reason bold summer flavours pair so well with higher-strength salts. If flavour nuance matters to you and you are on a lower strength, gentler profiles will come through more clearly. Our nicotine strength guide goes into this in more detail.
Buy small, try often
The beauty of the UK's 10ml bottle limit is that experimentation is cheap and low-risk. Rather than committing to a flavour you have never tried, buy a single bottle and live with it for a few days. Palates adjust, and a flavour that seems too sweet or too sour at first can settle into a favourite once you are used to it. Conversely, a blend you love on day one can become tiresome by day three. Buying small and trying often is the surest way to discover what genuinely suits you, and it is far more reliable than any review, including this one.
Nic salt vs freebase for these flavours
One of the most important decisions when buying any e-liquid, DOJO included, is whether to go for nicotine salts or traditional freebase nicotine. The choice affects the throat hit, the strength you can comfortably vape, and even how the flavour comes across. Because pod-focused ranges like DOJO lean heavily towards nic salts, it is worth understanding what that means.
What nic salts actually are
Nicotine salt is a formulation in which the nicotine is combined with an acid to change how it behaves. The practical upshot is that nic salts feel smoother on the throat at higher strengths than freebase nicotine does. A 20mg freebase liquid would be harsh and scratchy for most people; a 20mg nic salt is far more comfortable. That smoothness is exactly why nic salts have become the default for small, low-power pod devices, where the higher strength compensates for the modest vapour the device produces. In the UK, nic salts are commonly sold at 10mg and 20mg, giving you a sensible step between a moderate and a stronger hit.
What freebase offers
Freebase nicotine is the traditional form, and it has its own advantages. At lower strengths it can deliver a more pronounced throat hit, which some vapers actively enjoy as part of the sensation. Freebase liquids are often associated with higher-power sub-ohm setups, but plenty of lower-strength freebase liquids work perfectly well in pod kits too. The trade-off is that freebase becomes harsh at the higher strengths that pod users often want, which is why a 20mg freebase liquid is rare and generally unpleasant. If you vape at a lower strength, say 6mg or below, freebase can be a lovely option in a refillable pod.
How the choice affects summer flavours
For the bright, bold flavours that define a summer range, nic salts are usually the natural pairing. The smoothness of salts lets the sweet, fruity and sour notes shine without a harsh throat hit getting in the way, and the higher strength suits the low-power devices these flavours are designed for. If you are vaping iced fruit or sour berry blends in a pod kit, a nic salt at 10mg or 20mg is the path of least resistance.
That said, freebase has a place. If you prefer a stronger throat hit and vape at a lower strength, a freebase version of a fruit or menthol flavour can feel more satisfying in that respect. Menthol in particular pairs interestingly with freebase, because the cooling sensation and the throat hit combine into something quite invigorating. There is no universal right answer; it comes down to the strength you want and the sensation you are chasing. The key thing is to match the format to your device and your tolerance, rather than assuming one is simply better than the other.
Best devices to vape DOJO flavours in
A flavour is only as good as the device delivering it, and DOJO blends are built with a particular kind of hardware in mind: refillable, mouth-to-lung pod kits. Getting the device right is half the battle when it comes to enjoying any e-liquid, so it is worth thinking about what you vape these flavours in.
Why refillable pod kits suit DOJO
Refillable pod kits hit a sweet spot for these flavours. They run at modest power, which is exactly what nic salt liquids are formulated for, and they use a tight mouth-to-lung draw that concentrates flavour. Because you fill them yourself from a bottle, you get to choose the exact flavour and strength rather than being limited to whatever prefilled options exist. They are also more economical and produce far less waste than disposables, and with the way the UK market is moving, a refillable kit is simply the sensible long-term choice. If you are starting out, our roundup of the best refillable vape kits for beginners is a good place to begin.
The Vaporesso XROS
The most natural home for DOJO flavours is, unsurprisingly, a Vaporesso kit, and the XROS is the obvious recommendation. It is a compact, refillable pod system designed for the low-power, mouth-to-lung style that these liquids are tuned for. The XROS has earned a strong reputation for reliable flavour and a comfortable draw, and because it comes from the same brand as DOJO, the pairing is about as seamless as it gets. You fill the pod with your chosen DOJO liquid, let it sit for a few minutes to prime, and you are away. The adjustable airflow on the device lets you tighten or loosen the draw to suit the flavour, which is handy for fine-tuning how an iced fruit or a sour blend comes across. We cover the device in depth in our Vaporesso XROS review.
Other compatible options
You are by no means restricted to Vaporesso hardware. Any decent refillable MTL pod kit will handle DOJO liquids happily. The things to look for are a mouth-to-lung draw, coils in the higher resistance range that suit nic salts, and a pod you can refill easily without leaks. Plenty of kits from other brands fit the bill, and the right one for you depends on factors like battery life, size and how much you want to tinker with settings. If you would rather browse the full selection, our vape kits page lays out the options. The headline point is that a coordinated brand pairing like XROS and DOJO is convenient, but the flavours will reward you in any well-chosen MTL pod kit.
What to avoid
The main thing to steer clear of is putting a high-strength nic salt into a high-power sub-ohm device. That combination produces far too much nicotine per puff and can be genuinely unpleasant, even unsafe-feeling, because the device vaporises so much liquid at once. Nic salts and big-cloud devices simply do not mix. Keep your DOJO salts in the low-power pod kits they are designed for, and reserve any sub-ohm setup for low-strength, high-VG cloud liquids. Matching strength to device is one of the most important habits a vaper can build.
Strength guide
Choosing the right nicotine strength is just as important as choosing the right flavour, and it is an area where a lot of new vapers go wrong, either by picking something too weak and feeling unsatisfied, or too strong and feeling queasy. In the UK the options are constrained by law, which actually makes the decision simpler than it might be elsewhere.
The UK strength ceiling
British law caps e-liquid nicotine at 20mg per millilitre. That is the strongest you can legally buy, and it applies to bottles and pods alike. For nic salts, the common strengths are 10mg and 20mg, giving you a moderate and a stronger option. Freebase liquids are usually found at lower strengths, commonly ranging from nicotine-free up to around 18mg, though the most popular freebase choices sit lower than that. Knowing these numbers helps you read a product label at a glance and understand where it falls on the spectrum.
Matching strength to your needs
The right strength depends largely on how much nicotine you are used to and how your device performs. In a low-power pod kit, which produces relatively little vapour per puff, a higher strength like 20mg nic salt is often appropriate, because each puff delivers less vapour and therefore less nicotine than a big sub-ohm device would. Heavier former smokers frequently start at 20mg in a pod and find it satisfying. Lighter users, or those who have already stepped down, often do well at 10mg. If you find yourself vaping almost constantly, that can be a sign your strength is too low; if you feel lightheaded or queasy, it is a sign it is too high. Adjusting strength is a normal part of dialling in your setup.
How strength interacts with flavour and the device
As mentioned earlier, higher strengths can slightly mute delicate flavours and add a faint nicotine note of their own, while also producing a stronger throat hit. If you are vaping bold summer flavours, this matters less, because sweet, sour and iced profiles stand up well to a higher strength. If you are chasing flavour nuance, a lower strength will let the subtler notes through. The interplay between strength, flavour and device is part of what makes finding your ideal setup a slightly personal journey. For a fuller breakdown, our nicotine strength guide walks through the considerations in more depth, and you can browse strengths across the range on our e-liquids page.
A note on the upcoming duty
It is worth flagging a change on the horizon that affects everyone buying e-liquid in the UK. From 1 October 2026, a Vaping Products Duty of £2.20 per 10ml comes into effect. That applies to e-liquid regardless of strength or flavour, and it will be reflected in shelf prices once it lands. It does not change which strength is right for you, but it is a sensible reason to understand your preferences and buy what genuinely suits you rather than experimenting wastefully. Prices across the market will shift to account for the duty, so it is worth being aware of as you plan your purchases.
Tips for getting the best flavour
Even the finest e-liquid can disappoint if your setup or habits are not quite right. A few simple practices make a real difference to how much flavour you get out of every bottle, and they cost nothing but a little patience. Here is how to give your DOJO flavours the best possible chance to shine.
Prime your coils properly
Priming is the single most important habit for good flavour and long coil life. When you fit a fresh coil or pod, the wicking material inside is bone dry, and firing it before it has soaked up liquid produces a horrible burnt taste that can ruin the coil instantly. To prime, add your liquid, then wait. Letting a freshly filled pod stand for five to ten minutes gives the wick time to saturate fully. Some people also add a drop or two of liquid directly onto the exposed wicking before assembling. The result is a clean, full-flavoured first vape rather than a scorched disappointment. Patience here pays for itself many times over.
Let your liquid steep
Steeping is the process of letting an e-liquid mature, much as you might let a sauce rest so the flavours meld. Some liquids taste their best straight away, but others, particularly complex fruit and dessert blends, improve after a few days or weeks as the flavour compounds settle and integrate. To steep, simply store the bottle somewhere cool and dark, giving it an occasional shake. If a flavour seems a little flat or sharp when you first open it, do not write it off; give it a week and try again. Steeping is not essential for every blend, but it can transform certain ones, and it costs nothing but time.
Store your liquid well
How you store e-liquid affects both flavour and longevity. The enemies are heat, light and air. Heat and light degrade the flavourings and can dull a vibrant blend over time, while exposure to air gradually oxidises the liquid. Keep your bottles tightly capped, somewhere cool and dark, such as a drawer or cupboard, and away from windowsills and radiators. This is doubly relevant in summer, when a bottle left in a hot car or a sunny spot can deteriorate quickly. Treat your liquid with a little care and it will repay you with consistent flavour to the last drop. It goes without saying, but store all nicotine products well out of reach of children and pets.
Change pods and coils on time
Coils do not last forever, and a tired coil is one of the most common reasons a once-loved flavour starts to taste muted or burnt. When you notice the flavour dropping off, a faint scorched edge creeping in, or the vapour thinning out, it is time for a fresh coil or pod. Sweeter, darker liquids tend to gunk up coils faster than lighter ones, so a heavily sweetened blend may need more frequent changes. Staying on top of this keeps every flavour tasting as the maker intended.
Keep your device clean
Flavour ghosting, where the taste of a previous liquid lingers into the next, is a real annoyance when you switch flavours often. Giving your pod a quick rinse and dry between very different flavours helps, as does using a separate pod for strongly flavoured liquids like menthol, which is notorious for haunting a pod long after you have moved on. A clean device is a better-tasting device, and a couple of minutes of maintenance goes a long way. You can find compatible kit and accessories on our store.
Frequently asked questions
What are the new Vaporesso DOJO flavours for summer 2026?
Summer ranges typically focus on fruit, ice and menthol, berry and sour, and drink and sweet blends, and the new Vaporesso DOJO flavours follow that seasonal pattern. Exact line-ups change from season to season, so rather than listing precise products that may shift, this guide describes the flavour families and profiles you can expect. For the current confirmed selection, check our e-liquids page, where in-stock flavours are listed as they become available.
Are DOJO e-liquids nic salt or freebase?
DOJO, like most pod-focused ranges, leans heavily towards nicotine salts, which suit the low-power devices these flavours are designed for. Some flavours may also be available in freebase form. Nic salts are smoother at higher strengths and pair naturally with bold summer flavours, while freebase offers a stronger throat hit at lower strengths. The right choice depends on your device and the sensation you prefer.
What nicotine strengths can I buy in the UK?
UK law caps e-liquid at 20mg per millilitre. Nic salts are commonly sold at 10mg and 20mg, while freebase liquids are usually found at lower strengths down to nicotine-free. The 20mg ceiling applies to every nicotine-containing liquid sold to British consumers, so you will not find anything stronger on a legitimate UK shelf.
What device should I use for DOJO flavours?
These flavours are designed for refillable, mouth-to-lung pod kits running at modest power. The Vaporesso XROS is the most natural pairing, since it comes from the same brand and is built for exactly this style, but any quality MTL pod kit will work well. Avoid putting high-strength nic salts into high-power sub-ohm devices, as that delivers far too much nicotine per puff.
Why do my summer flavours taste better with ice?
The cooling sensation in iced and menthol blends is a physical effect rather than a flavour, and it makes a fruit taste seem crisper and more refreshing, especially in warm weather. It is similar to how an iced drink feels more thirst-quenching than a warm one. That is why iced fruit blends are so popular in summer ranges, and why the same fruit can feel completely different with a cooling note added.
What is the difference between menthol and other cooling agents?
Menthol delivers both a cooling sensation and its own minty flavour, whereas the flavourless cooling agents used in many iced fruit blends provide the chill without adding any mint taste. If you love the cool hit but dislike the taste of mint, look for iced fruit blends that use a flavourless cooling agent rather than menthol. The label or product description usually makes the distinction clear.
How long do DOJO e-liquids last once opened?
Stored properly, away from heat, light and air, an opened bottle keeps well for a good while, though flavour and nicotine quality gradually decline over time. Keep bottles tightly capped in a cool, dark place, and use them within a sensible window rather than hoarding open bottles for months. Always check the expiry date printed on the bottle, and store all nicotine products safely away from children and pets.
Will the 2026 vape tax change the price of DOJO liquids?
Yes. From 1 October 2026, a Vaping Products Duty of £2.20 per 10ml applies to e-liquid in the UK, regardless of flavour or strength. Shelf prices will adjust to reflect the duty once it takes effect. It does not change which flavour or strength is right for you, but it is worth being aware of when planning purchases. Prices quoted anywhere should be treated as approximate, as they vary by retailer and over time.
Can I vape DOJO flavours all day, or are some better as occasional treats?
It depends on the flavour. Clean single fruits and light iced blends tend to make excellent all-day vapes, while intensely sweet, sour or heavily flavoured options can become fatiguing if vaped constantly. Many people keep a mild flavour as their main liquid and reserve bolder profiles for variety. Because UK bottles are small, building a small rotation is easy and affordable.
Where can I buy the new Vaporesso DOJO flavours and a compatible kit?
You can browse e-liquids and compatible refillable kits through PinkVape. Our e-liquids page lists available flavours, our vape kits page covers compatible hardware including the Vaporesso XROS, and our store brings everything together. If you are new to refillables, the best refillable vape kits for beginners guide is a sensible starting point before you choose your first flavour.
PinkVape sells to over-18s only. Nicotine is an addictive substance. This article is general information, not health or medical advice. Prices are approximate and vary by retailer.
Frequently asked questions
What are the new Vaporesso DOJO flavours for summer 2026?
The summer 2026 DOJO line-up leans into four flavour families: clean and tropical fruit blends, ice and menthol, berry and sour, and drink-inspired or sweet profiles. Exact named SKUs change from season to season, so check the PinkVape e-liquids page for the current confirmed selection. The range is built to suit refillable mouth-to-lung pod kits.
Are DOJO e-liquids nicotine salt or freebase?
DOJO leans heavily on nicotine salts because the range is tuned for low-power pod kits like the Vaporesso XROS. Some flavours may also appear in freebase form for vapers who prefer a stronger throat hit at lower strengths. Nic salts feel smoother at the 10mg and 20mg strengths most pod users reach for.
What nicotine strength can I legally buy in the UK?
UK law caps e-liquid nicotine at 20mg per millilitre, and that applies to every bottle and prefilled pod sold to British consumers. Nic salts are typically offered at 10mg and 20mg, while freebase liquids commonly run from nicotine-free up to around 18mg. Bottles are limited to 10ml and prefilled pods to 2ml.
What is the best device for vaping Vaporesso DOJO flavours?
A refillable mouth-to-lung pod kit is the ideal home for DOJO liquids, and the Vaporesso XROS is the most natural pairing since both come from the same brand. Any quality MTL pod kit with higher-resistance coils will also work well. Avoid putting high-strength nic salts into a sub-ohm device, as the combination delivers far too much nicotine per puff.
What is the difference between menthol and other cooling agents in iced e-liquids?
Menthol delivers both a cooling sensation and a distinct minty flavour, while flavourless cooling agents like koolada give you the chill without the mint taste. If you love the cool hit but dislike toothpaste notes, look for iced fruit blends that use a flavourless cooling agent. Product descriptions usually make the distinction clear.
Will the 2026 UK vape tax change the price of DOJO e-liquids?
Yes. From 1 October 2026, a Vaping Products Duty of £2.20 per 10ml applies to all e-liquid sold in the UK, regardless of flavour or nicotine strength. Shelf prices will adjust to reflect the duty once it takes effect, so prices quoted now should be treated as approximate.
How should I store DOJO e-liquids to keep the flavour fresh?
Keep bottles tightly capped in a cool, dark place away from heat, light and air, which are the three things that degrade flavourings and nicotine over time. A drawer or cupboard is fine, but avoid windowsills, radiators and hot cars, especially in summer. Always store nicotine products safely out of reach of children and pets.
You must be 18 or over to shop with PinkVape. We verify age & ID at checkout and never sell to under-18s.


