NicScout

Cuba Ninja nicotine pouches review

The novelty act of the test. Coconut and Piña Colada are flavors nobody else attempts — but delivery and comfort trail every other brand on the board.

By Jake Morrison · Last updated: July 10, 2026 · Scored per our methodology

6.5/ 10

What works

  • The only cocktail-inspired flavors in the test — Piña Colada is genuinely unlike anything else stocked
  • Mid-pack pricing at €2.86 per can (€0.14 per pouch)
  • Consistent 10 mg/g across the range — no strength surprises when switching flavors

What doesn't

  • Softest-feeling 10 mg/g in the test; users calibrated on White Fox will find it underpowered
  • Wet, high-drip pouches that get uncomfortable past the half-hour mark
  • Sweet profiles invite flavor fatigue — these are occasional pouches, not daily drivers

Score breakdown

CriterionWeightScoreNotes
Flavor30%7/10Bold, distinctive dessert profiles with real novelty value. Sweetness wears out its welcome in long sessions.
Strength accuracy25%6/10Labeled 10 mg/g but delivers the gentlest experience of any 10 in the test. Slow onset, soft plateau.
Moisture & comfort25%6/10Noticeably wet pouches. Fast flavor start, but the most drip and the shortest comfortable wear time on the board.
Value20%7/10€0.14 per pouch for flavors with no substitute is fair. As an everyday can, 77 and CLEW beat it.
Overall (weighted)100%6.5/10Weighted average of the four criteria

The verified lineup (3 products)

Every row below was verified against the live retailer listing before this review was written. Product links go to the exact page each spec was checked against.

ProductFlavorStrengthFormatPouches/canPrice/canPer pouch
Cuba Ninja CoconutCoconut10 mg/gslim202.860.14
Cuba Ninja Mint FreshMint Fresh10 mg/gslim202.860.14
Cuba Ninja Piña ColadaPiña Colada10 mg/gslim202.860.14

Strengths and flavors as listed by the retailer. Prices checked at nicopodstore.com on July 10, 2026 and may have changed since.

What Cuba Ninja is selling

The verified Cuba Ninja lineup is three products, all at 10 mg/g, all slim format, all 20 pouches per can, all €2.86: Coconut, Mint Fresh, and Piña Colada. That per-can price lands mid-pack — €0.14 per pouch, above 77 and CLEW, below Klint, NEAFS, and White Fox.

Two of those three flavors tell you exactly what this brand is about. Nobody else in the test — nobody else in the retailer's catalog — sells a coconut pouch or a piña colada pouch. Cuba Ninja exists to be the beach-drink option in a category dominated by mint and berries, and that positioning is both its entire appeal and, as the scores show, not quite enough to carry the fundamentals.

Flavor: 7/10 — genuinely novel, eventually exhausting

Piña Colada is the flagship and the reason to buy the brand. It leads with pineapple, backs it with a creamy coconut sweetness, and for the first ten minutes it is honestly delightful — the most fun single pouch experience in this test. My notes from the first session read like a positive review of a dessert.

Coconut is more polarizing. Straight coconut with a creamy edge and little else going on: if you like coconut you will like it, and if you find coconut soapy — a common and well-documented taste split — nothing here will convert you. I am mildly in the pro-coconut camp and still found a full pouch session about 40% longer than the flavor stayed interesting.

That is the pattern with both dessert profiles: heavy sweetness that thrills early and cloys late. By the third pouch of a day, I wanted something clean — and the brand's answer, Mint Fresh, is the weakest mint in the test group. It is not bad; it is anonymous, a straightforward sweet-mint that exists so the range has a mint. Score the novelty pair alone and this is an 8 with an asterisk; average in the mint and session fatigue, and 7 is what it earns.

Strength accuracy: 6/10 — the softest 10 on the board

All three products carry a 10 mg/g label, the same concentration as White Fox and CLEW. Concentration, though, is measured per gram — how a pouch actually delivers depends on more than the number, and Cuba Ninja's delivery is the gentlest of any 10 mg/g product I tested. Onset is slow, the plateau sits noticeably lower than White Fox's, and in my side-by-side notes it landed closer to 77's 8 mg/g mediums than to its labeled peers.

Whether that is a flaw depends on the user. If you want a mellow session with a dessert flavor, the soft curve is arguably the right design. But I score strength accuracy against the label and against what the same number means elsewhere in the catalog, and by that standard a 10 that behaves like an 8 costs points. Users stepping over from White Fox should expect a downgrade in kick despite the identical figure on the can.

Moisture and comfort: 6/10 — wet is a choice, drip is a consequence

Cuba Ninja pouches are the wettest in the test, and the design logic is clear: moisture accelerates flavor release, and these are flavor-first products. The opening minute of a Piña Colada pouch is immediate in a way White Fox's dry pouches never are.

The bill arrives later. Drip is constant and heavier than any other brand reviewed here, and the sweet profiles make it more noticeable — you are aware of every bit of it. Past 30 minutes the pouch body starts to feel slack and waterlogged, where a Klint or White Fox pouch still feels composed at the same mark. Fill and seam quality are acceptable for the mid-tier price; it is the moisture tuning, not the construction, that caps this score.

Value: 7/10 — fair price for a flavor monopoly

At €0.14 per pouch, Cuba Ninja costs 17% more than 77 and 40% more than CLEW, while undercutting the premium tier by a clear margin. For an everyday-volume pouch, that is a hard sell — the cheaper brands are simply better at fundamentals.

But value is about substitutes, and for Coconut and Piña Colada there are none. If those flavors are what you want, the €2.86 can is the only game in town, and it is priced reasonably for a monopoly. My honest read: this is a rotation brand. One can alongside your daily driver, not instead of it — and at this price, that role is affordable.

How Cuba Ninja compares

Against 77, the other fun-flavor brand, Cuba Ninja loses on nearly every fundamental: 77 is cheaper, its pouches drier and more comfortable, its flavor menu wider. What Cuba Ninja holds is the cocktail niche — Raspberry Vanilla is 77's most adventurous swing, while Piña Colada is a different sport. Against CLEW at the same 10 mg/g, CLEW is €0.82 cheaper per can and more disciplined in the mouth, but its flavor list has nothing you will remember by evening. That is the whole Cuba Ninja proposition in one line: memorable where everything else is sensible, and last on my scoreboard because sensible wins a weighted rubric.

Bottom line: 6.5/10

Cuba Ninja scores 6.5/10, the lowest mark in my six-brand test — and it is still a brand I keep a can of. The bottom-quartile delivery, the drip, and the flavor fatigue are real and measurable; so is the fact that Piña Colada exists nowhere else. Buy it as the novelty act in your rotation and it over-delivers. Buy it as your daily pouch and every weakness in this review will find you by the end of the first week.

Shop the Cuba Ninja range at nicopodstore.com

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