What Klint is selling
The Klint range I can actually verify at the retailer right now is three products: Apple Mint X-Strong at 16 mg/g, Arctic Mint X-Strong at 16 mg/g, and Pink Grapefruit Strong at 12 mg/g. All three are slim-format pouches, all three come 20 to a can, and all three are priced at €3.27 per can as of my July 2026 price check. That works out to €0.16 per pouch, which puts Klint in the premium half of the board — cheaper than White Fox, level with NEAFS, and well above CLEW and 77.
Notice what is missing from that lineup: anything gentle. The lightest Klint you can buy here is 12 mg/g, and two of the three options are 16 mg/g. For context, that 16 mg/g figure matches the strongest products NEAFS and 77 sell, and it comfortably exceeds White Fox's 10 mg/g. If you are new to pouches, this is not the brand to start with — read my methodology page for how I think about strength selection, then look at the NEAFS 6 mg/g Regular line instead.
Flavor: 9/10 — the best in the test
This is where Klint earns its price tag. Most pouch flavors in this category are a single note — mint, more mint, or fruit candy. Klint builds profiles with layers, and the layers survive actual use instead of vanishing after five minutes.
Pink Grapefruit Strong is the best single product I scored across all six reviews. Grapefruit is a risky flavor for a pouch because citrus tends to read as cleaning product when it is overdone. Klint keeps it tart, slightly bitter in the way real grapefruit actually is, and balanced against enough sweetness to stay pleasant deep into a session. Nothing else in the test group attempts this level of flavor engineering, let alone lands it.
The two X-Strong mints are quietly excellent rather than flashy. Apple Mint leads with green apple over a mint base — the apple is recognizable as apple, not as generic candy sweetness, which is rarer than it should be in this category. Arctic Mint is the conventional pick of the three: a cold, clean mint that stays crisp without the pepper bite White Fox goes for. If I am scoring pure mints alone, White Fox Double Mint still edges it, but as a three-flavor portfolio Klint has the strongest hit rate of any brand here.
Strength accuracy: 8/10
Klint labels its two mints X-Strong at 16 mg/g and the grapefruit Strong at 12 mg/g, and my experience tracks those labels. The 16s hit hard and fast, as a 16 should — this is a genuine upper-tier strength, and the onset does not lag the way some high-mg pouches do. The 12 mg/g Pink Grapefruit sits noticeably below the 16s in intensity, which is exactly what you want: the tier names mean something within the brand's own range.
One point of order for cross-brand shoppers: strengths on the retailer's listings are stated in mg per gram, not mg per pouch, and pouch weights are not published. That means a 16 mg/g Klint and a 16 mg/g NEAFS Extra Strong are comparable on paper but not guaranteed identical in the lip. In practice I found the Klint 16s among the most assertive products in the test — I docked one point only because the jump from the brand's 12 to its 16 is steep, and there is nothing in between.
Moisture and comfort: 8/10
All three Klint products use a slim pouch that seats cleanly under the lip and stays put. Moisture is tuned to the middle of the range — enough that the flavor releases quickly, not so much that you get flooding or heavy drip in the first minutes. I could keep a pouch in for a long session without the scratchiness that budget pouches develop as they dry out.
Material quality is a step above the budget tier. Seams are tight, fill is even, and I did not get a single misshapen pouch across the cans I went through. It is the kind of detail you only notice when a cheaper brand gets it wrong — see my CLEW review for the contrast.
Value: 6/10 — you pay for the craft
Here is the math. Klint costs €3.27 for 20 pouches, or €0.16 per pouch. CLEW delivers a perfectly usable 10 mg/g pouch at €0.10. That is a 60% premium for Klint, and whether it is worth paying comes down to how much you care about flavor execution.
My take: for the Pink Grapefruit, pay it — there is no substitute in this catalog. For the mints, the decision is closer. Arctic Mint is better than any budget mint, but 77 Ice Mint at €0.12 per pouch covers the same cold-mint brief at 8 mg/g for meaningfully less money. Klint is a deliberate purchase, not a default restock.
How Klint compares
Against White Fox, the other premium brand in the test, Klint wins on flavor range and price and loses on mint purity — White Fox does one thing at 10 mg/g and does it with total confidence. Against NEAFS at the identical €3.27 price point, Klint has clearly better flavors while NEAFS has the strength ladder Klint completely lacks. If you want to explore before committing to 16 mg/g, NEAFS is the smarter first buy; if you already know you want strong and flavorful, Klint is the better can.
Bottom line: 7.9/10
Klint takes the top score in my test at 7.9/10 on the strength of flavor execution nothing else here matches. It is a premium product priced like one, with a verified lineup that only makes sense for users already comfortable at 12–16 mg/g. Not the cheapest can on the board, and not the entry point — but the one I reach for when flavor is the priority.
Shop the Klint range at nicopodstore.com