Some brands shout. Aspire just hits. For close to ten years now this hardware maker has been quietly building refillable pod kits and pod-mods that fire on day one, fire on day three hundred, and fire on day six hundred too. That is the kind of energy we back. This Vape Daily breakdown puts the Aspire Loomix front and centre and tells you, straight up, whether an Aspire kit deserves space in your pocket in 2026. Short answer: yes. Long answer: read on. You get rock-solid build, a draw that lands like a cigarette, and a running cost so low it almost feels rude.

Cracking the box

Lift the lid on an Aspire kit and you get the basics, no fluff. Inside: the device, a couple of refillable pods, two coils (usually one tight and one loose so you can play), a USB-C lead, and the obligatory bits of paperwork. The e-liquid is on you. No throwaway extras. No mystery gadgets. Nothing that needs decoding. It is gear, not theatre, and we are here for it.

Now pick it up. The Loomix has weight in the right places. Panels meet flush. Buttons click crisply. The thing feels properly engineered, not like the rattly plastic that haunts the bottom shelf. It also dodges the other trap: it is not some chunky enthusiast mod that demands you read a forum before you can vape. Fill it. Drop a coil in. Charge it. Pull. That is the entire onboarding.

Be clear on one thing. This is a refillable, rechargeable kit. Not a disposable. Not a sealed prefilled pod machine. That single fact dictates everything you are about to read, including why these kits sailed through the 2025 disposables ban without breaking a sweat.

Looks and pocket life

Aspire does not do flashy. The Loomix and its siblings are built to vanish into your jacket and reappear when you need a hit. If you want flame decals and screens with animations, look somewhere else. If you want hardware that does its job and stops trying to win a beauty contest, Aspire delivers. Plain, pocketable, properly made.

The day-to-day stuff is where it really earns its keep. USB-C charging means you grab any modern cable on your desk and you are sorted. The fill ports are easy to find and easy to use. Pods snap home with a confident click that tells your hands the seal is good. Battery on the Loomix and its compact stablemates is tuned for an average day, not a marathon, so if you chain-vape like a chimney you will be reaching for the lead more often. That is just maths.

Controls? Almost none. The model fires when you draw or fires on a single button, depending which Loomix sibling you grabbed. Zero wattage curves to mess with. Zero menus to scroll. For your first refillable kit, that simplicity is gold. Want to see how Aspire stacks against other simple kits worth your money? Check our roundup of the best refillable vape kits for beginners.

Coils, airflow, and the punch

The coil is where the magic lives. Aspire coils are replaceable, not glued to a binnable pod, and that matters. When flavour fades or you catch a hint of burn, you yank the old coil and slot a fresh one. Done. Most Aspire pods accept more than one resistance, and that pick changes the whole personality of the kit. Higher ohms means a tighter, warmer pull that hits like a cigarette. Lower ohms loosens the draw and pushes more cloud. Pick your weapon.

The airflow ring is the other half of the equation. Twist it down for a tight mouth-to-lung lockdown. Twist it open for a softer, airier ride. The change is instant. Spend five minutes hunting for your sweet spot. Trust us, it is worth it. Newcomers almost always land on a tighter setting paired with the higher-ohm coil, which is exactly the cigarette-mimicking config Aspire kits absolutely nail.

For juice, lock in nicotine salts at 10mg or 20mg. Salts are made for this style of kit. They land smoother on the throat than freebase at the same strength, and they deliver nicotine fast, which is what an ex-smoker actually needs. If those numbers mean nothing to you yet, our nicotine strength guide spells it out, and our wider tour of vape kits explains how coil and airflow choices reshape the experience across different formats. Match the coil, the airflow, and the liquid right and an Aspire kit fires clean, consistent and tasty for months.

What it costs to run

This is the bit that punches prefilled and disposable users right in the wallet. Sealed-pod systems whack a premium on every millilitre of liquid, and that premium stacks fast if you vape every day. A refillable kit flips the model on its head. You pay once for the hardware, then top up from a bottle you chose yourself, at a tiny fraction of the per-ml cost of sealed pods.

The numbers are friendly. An Aspire kit usually lands between £12 and £20. Replacement coils run around £2 to £3 a pop. Stack that against the relentless drip of buying sealed pods or, back in the day, disposables, and the savings stack up week on week. Your biggest ongoing spend becomes the juice itself, and because you are buying bigger bottles instead of overpriced capsules, even that part of the bill stays modest. Coils are the only other consumable and they are basically loose change.

And from 1 October 2026, the new Vaping Products Duty of around £2.20 per 10ml kicks in on all e-liquid sold in the UK. That tax lands on every vaper, regardless of device. But it lands proportionally lighter on refillable users buying cheap bottled juice than it does on anyone still paying a sealed-pod premium. So an Aspire refillable kit is, frankly, a smart hedge against a tax climate that is only getting harder. Browse current kits, spare coils and a fat list of e-liquids in our store and crunch your own numbers.

What lights it up

The build quality is the headliner. Aspire kits feel properly screwed together, and that solidity is the reason these things keep firing months after the cheap stuff has dropped dead. Simplicity is the second pillar. Nothing to learn beyond fill, coil, charge, hit.

Past that, the replaceable coils and adjustable airflow let you dial in the draw without drowning you in settings. USB-C charging is a small win that adds up daily. And the running cost, once the kit is in your hand, is genuinely hard to argue with. Bundle the whole package together and you can see exactly why Aspire keeps showing up on UK trusted-brand lists year after year.

What to watch for

The understated look cuts both ways. If you wanted a device that turns heads at the bus stop, Aspire is going to feel boring. Nothing wrong with it. Just be clear what you are buying.

Battery life on the smaller Loomix-style kits is built for an average user. Heavy all-day vapers will be plugging in more than they would like. The refillable format also asks a tiny bit more of you than a disposable did. You have to fill the pod, swap coils every so often, and keep e-liquid in stock. For most people that becomes muscle memory inside a week. And while replaceable coils slash long-term costs, dialling in the right resistance and airflow combo for your taste might take a few goes at the start. None of these are dealbreakers. They are just the honest trade-offs of a refillable kit versus a sealed one.

Who should grab one

An Aspire kit is made for the adult vaper who picks reliability over bling and would rather spend less over time than pay a sealed-pod premium for the rest of their vaping life. It is one of the smartest first refillable kits you can buy because the learning curve is short and the build inspires confidence from the first hit. Experienced vapers hunting a no-drama daily driver will love it just as much.

It is a worse pick if you crave eye-catching looks, the longest possible battery, or the deep customisation of an enthusiast box mod. For everyone else, Aspire serves up dependable kit, fair pricing, and proper ease of use. The Loomix is a fair flagship for the line: nothing about it shouts, and that is exactly the point. To see how the rest of the family lines up, hit our overview of Aspire vapes for the full roster.

The Loomix in numbers

Quick-glance specs for the kind of Aspire kit you are most likely to be eyeing in 2026. Confirm the exact figures on the specific model page before you buy.

  • Format: Refillable pod kit or pod-mod, bring your own bottled juice.
  • Draw style: Mouth-to-lung first, with some models capable of a restricted DTL pull on the right coil.
  • Pod capacity: Around 2ml, in line with the UK refillable-pod cap.
  • Coils: Replaceable, more than one resistance, roughly £2 to £3 each.
  • Airflow: Adjustable ring, tight cigarette pull to loose airy pull.
  • Battery: Internal rechargeable cell, capacity varies by model.
  • Charging: USB-C.
  • Activation: Draw-fire or single button depending on model.
  • Juice match: Nic salts 10mg or 20mg for tight MTL, lower-strength freebase for looser draws.
  • UK nicotine cap: 20mg/ml maximum, no exceptions.
  • Kit price: Around £12 to £20.
  • Legal status: Fully UK-legal, untouched by the disposables ban.
  • Age: Strict 18+, age verification on every order.

Common questions, blunt answers

Will an Aspire kit work for a total beginner? Yes, easily. Fill the pod, fit a coil, charge over USB-C, hit it. No menus, no wattage curves, no sub-ohm theory. The solid build and the short learning curve make this one of the easiest refillable kits to start with.

What juice should go in it? For tight MTL kits like these, lock in a nicotine salt e-liquid at 10mg or 20mg. Salts are smoother at higher strengths and deliver nicotine fast, which is exactly what an ex-smoker wants. Our nicotine strength guide breaks down how to pick the right number for your old smoking habit.

How cheap is it to run? The kit costs £12 to £20 up front. Replacement coils sit at £2 to £3 each. Because you refill from your own bottle of juice instead of buying sealed pods, the per-ml cost drops massively compared to prefilled systems. That is where the long-term savings live, and they only grow once the duty hits in October 2026.

Are these legal in the UK? Yes. Aspire's refillable, rechargeable kits comply fully with UK rules and were never affected by the ban on single-use disposables, because the whole point of the design is that you refill and reuse them.

How often do I swap a coil? Depends on your juice and how hard you vape. Generally a coil holds up until you notice the flavour dropping off or a faintly burnt edge creeping in. At that point, drop in a fresh one. Cheap, fast, done.

Ready to swap the noise for kit that just fires? Snap up an Aspire Loomix from the Vape Daily store tonight. Order before midnight and your kit ships next working day, age-verified at checkout, plain packaging, ready to light up the moment it lands. No fluff. No nonsense. Just gear that hits.

Vape Daily is strict 18+. Age verification runs on every order. Nicotine is highly addictive. This article is general information, not medical or health advice. Prices and specs are approximate and vary by retailer and model.

Frequently asked questions

Is the Aspire Loomix any good for beginners in 2026?

Yes, the Aspire Loomix is one of the easiest refillable kits a UK beginner can start on. Fill the pod, drop in a coil, charge over USB-C and hit it - there are no menus, wattage curves or sub-ohm theory to learn. The solid build and short learning curve make it a proper no-drama first kit.

How much does an Aspire vape kit cost in the UK?

An Aspire kit usually lands between £12 and £20 up front, with replacement coils at around £2 to £3 each. Because you refill from your own bottle of e-liquid instead of buying sealed pods, the per-ml cost drops massively versus prefilled systems. Long term it is one of the cheapest ways to vape legally in the UK.

Are Aspire refillable vape kits legal in the UK after the disposables ban?

Yes, Aspire's refillable, rechargeable kits are fully UK-legal and were never affected by the 2025 single-use disposables ban. The whole point of the design is that you refill and reuse them, so they sailed through untouched. Pods stick to the UK 2ml cap and e-liquid stays under the 20mg/ml nicotine limit.

What nicotine strength e-liquid should I use in an Aspire Loomix?

Lock in a nicotine salt e-liquid at 10mg or 20mg for tight mouth-to-lung kits like the Loomix. Salts land smoother on the throat at higher strengths and deliver nicotine fast, which is exactly what an ex-smoker needs. Drop to lower-strength freebase juice only if you have opened the airflow up for a looser draw.

How often do you need to change the coil in an Aspire pod kit?

Swap the coil when you notice the flavour dropping off or a faintly burnt edge creeping in - usually every one to two weeks depending on juice and how hard you vape. Sweeter e-liquids gunk coils faster than plain menthol or tobacco flavours. At £2 to £3 a coil, replacement is cheap and takes seconds.

How will the 2026 UK vape tax affect Aspire refillable kits?

From 1 October 2026 the new Vaping Products Duty adds around £2.20 per 10ml to all UK e-liquid, regardless of device. That tax lands proportionally lighter on refillable Aspire users buying bottled juice than on anyone still paying a sealed-pod premium. A refillable kit like the Loomix is a smart hedge against a tax climate that is only getting harder.

Aspire Loomix vs disposable vapes - which is better value?

The Aspire Loomix wins on value, legality and consistency. Disposables are banned in the UK as of June 2025, while the Loomix is fully legal, refillable and costs pennies per ml once you are topping up from a bottle. You pay £12 to £20 once for the hardware instead of bleeding cash on throwaway bars every few days.

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