TL;DR — Lost Mary BM6000 in 2026: The BM6000 is Lost Mary's rechargeable, refill-pod replacement for the banned BM600 disposable. You get roughly 6,000 puffs across two prefilled 2ml pods, a 500mAh USB-C battery, mesh coils and the same juicy flavour bank fans loved on the disposable — Blueberry Sour Raspberry, Watermelon Ice, Triple Mango, Cherry Peach Lemonade and around 30 more. It is fully UK-legal under the June 2025 disposable ban, sits inside the TPD 20mg nic-salt cap, and typically sells for £5.99 for the device plus £4.99 for a two-pod replacement pack. Verdict: the best BM600 replacement on the market, provided you can live with pods you snap on rather than refill from a bottle.
Shop the Lost Mary BM6000 kit — or grab replacement BM6000 pods and skip the queue.
What is the Lost Mary BM6000?
The Lost Mary BM6000 is a rechargeable prefilled pod kit that delivers approximately 6,000 puffs by pairing a small USB-C battery device with two 2ml TPD-compliant nic-salt pods per pack. It is Lost Mary's flagship response to the UK Single-Use Vapes (England) Regulations 2025, which banned single-use disposables from 1 June 2025.
Mechanically, the BM6000 is a hybrid. It looks like a disposable — pebble-shaped, pocketable, no buttons, draw-activated — but the mouthpiece is a snap-on pod that clicks off when empty, and the base is a rechargeable device with a USB-C port. You buy the starter kit once, then keep buying pod packs. Each pod is prefilled with 2ml of 20mg nic-salt e-liquid, uses an internal mesh coil, and is rated for roughly 3,000 puffs. Two pods per pack = the "6000" in the name.
The kit is manufactured by Imiracle, the Chinese vape giant behind both Lost Mary and Elf Bar, and it sits directly against the Elfa/ELFX system from the sister brand. Compared to a refillable pod kit like the Hayati Pro Max, the BM6000 trades refill flexibility for zero-mess convenience and identical flavour to the old disposable.
Who is the BM6000 for?
It is aimed squarely at ex-BM600 users — adult smokers or vapers who bought Lost Mary disposables for grab-and-go convenience and now need a legal, cheaper, less wasteful equivalent. If you have never vaped, please read the NHS guidance on using e-cigarettes to stop smoking first — vaping is a quit-smoking tool, not a lifestyle purchase, and it is age-restricted 18+.
Why the BM6000 exists: the UK disposable ban explained
Between 2022 and 2024 the BM600 became one of the UK's top-selling disposables. On 1 June 2025 that entire product category became illegal to sell in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The BM6000 is the workaround: same brand, same flavours, same throat-hit, but engineered around the new rules.
The Single-Use Vapes (England) Regulations 2025, together with parallel legislation in the devolved nations, prohibits the supply of any vape that cannot be both refilled and recharged. To sit inside the law, a product needs:
- A rechargeable battery (USB-C in practice).
- A replaceable pod or coil so it is not disposed of as a single unit.
- An e-liquid tank of 2ml or less.
- Nicotine strength capped at 20mg/ml under the retained TPD.
- MHRA notification and full ingredient disclosure.
The BM6000 ticks every one of those boxes. It is not, technically, "the same as a disposable" — you can throw a used pod in a battery recycling bin and keep the device, and you can top up the device charge from any USB-C phone charger. Whether that counts as a genuine sustainability win or a legal fig-leaf depends on how conscientious the user is. See the MHRA e-cigarette regulations for the full technical picture.
One more UK regulatory shoe is about to drop: from 1 October 2026, HMRC will levy Vaping Products Duty (VPD) at £2.20 per 10ml of e-liquid, plus a one-off £2.20 tobacco-duty uplift on the same day. That will push BM6000 pod-pack prices up by roughly 88p per 4ml pack overnight. Stock heads-up: buying multi-packs before October 2026 is not hoarding, it is arithmetic.
Lost Mary BM6000 specs at a glance
The BM6000 is a small draw-activated pod kit with a 500mAh internal battery, USB-C charging, mesh-coil 2ml pods rated at ~1.2Ω, and an approximate 3,000 puffs per pod. Two pods ship in each replacement pack for a total headline claim of 6,000 puffs per pack.
| Spec | Lost Mary BM6000 |
|---|---|
| Puff count (headline) | Up to 6,000 (2 pods × ~3,000) |
| Battery | 500mAh, USB-C rechargeable |
| Pod capacity | 2ml prefilled (TPD-compliant) |
| Nicotine strength | 20mg/ml nic-salt only |
| Coil | ~1.2Ω mesh, integrated |
| Activation | Draw-activated (no button) |
| Airflow | MTL (mouth-to-lung), fixed |
| Charging time | ~35-45 minutes 0-100% |
| Weight | ~28g with pod fitted |
| Kit RRP | £5.99 device + 1 pod |
| Replacement pods | £4.99 per 2-pod pack |
| Flavours (UK) | ~30 at launch, expanding |
| Compliance | MHRA notified, TPD-compliant, disposable-ban compliant |
How does the BM6000 actually feel to vape?
The BM6000 delivers a tight mouth-to-lung draw with warm, salty flavour on the first three-quarters of each pod, then a mild but noticeable drop-off in the final 20% as the wick starts to run dry. It sits comfortably in a jeans pocket at 28g and matches the mouthfeel of the discontinued BM600 more closely than any rival kit currently on UK shelves.
In hand it is nearly identical to the BM600 disposable — same rounded pebble profile, same soft-touch coating, same jewel colour options — so returning users get instant familiarity. The draw is tuned firm rather than loose. If you came off a cig-a-like or a Juul, it will feel right. If you came off a big sub-ohm mod, it will feel like sucking through a coffee stirrer.
Flavour delivery
Flavour delivery is genuinely close to the disposable. Imiracle appear to have used the same e-liquid recipes and coil geometry, so a Blueberry Sour Raspberry BM6000 pod tastes indistinguishable from the disposable version in a side-by-side test. The mesh coil produces a slightly cleaner top-note than the fibre-cotton wicks in the old BM600, which some tasters actually prefer.
Throat hit and nicotine delivery
At 20mg nic-salt the throat hit is smooth but present — enough to satisfy a 10-a-day smoker on demand, without the harsh scratch of freebase 20mg. Blood-nicotine curve on nic-salts is closer to a cigarette than a shortfill, which is exactly why NHS Better Health highlights salt-based vapes as an effective quit-smoking aid.
BM6000 vs BM600: what has changed?
The BM6000 keeps every flavour and nearly every physical dimension of the BM600 disposable, but swaps the sealed one-shot design for a rechargeable base and snap-on pods. In practice you get triple the puff count, half the per-puff cost, USB-C charging, and legal status in the UK — at the cost of buying two components instead of one.
| Feature | BM600 (banned) | BM6000 (legal) |
|---|---|---|
| UK legal 2026? | No — banned 1 June 2025 | Yes — TPD + disposable-ban compliant |
| Puffs | ~600 | ~6,000 (2 pods) |
| Rechargeable | No | Yes (USB-C, 500mAh) |
| Pod system | Sealed, disposable | Snap-on prefilled, replaceable |
| Nic strength | 20mg salt | 20mg salt |
| Cost per 600 puffs | £5.99 (single-use) | ~£0.50 after first pod |
| Landfill impact per 6,000 puffs | 10 disposables | 2 pods + 1 shared battery |
| Flavour bank | ~30 | ~30, same recipes |
The financial gap is the killer stat. Ten BM600s to hit 6,000 puffs cost roughly £59.90. One BM6000 kit plus one 2-pod pack costs £10.98. Even after you factor in accidentally losing the battery in a pub, the BM6000 is somewhere between 5x and 6x cheaper per puff.
The full 2026 BM6000 flavour list
Lost Mary launched the BM6000 with roughly 30 flavours across fruit, menthol, drink and dessert categories, and has been quietly expanding the range each quarter. Below is the flavour bank as of mid-2026 in the UK.
Fruit flavours
- Blueberry Sour Raspberry — the flagship, tart-then-sweet, closest to the OG BM600.
- Triple Mango — layered ripe, green and Alphonso notes.
- Watermelon Ice — light watermelon rind with strong menthol.
- Cherry Peach Lemonade — the sleeper hit; balanced, not cloying.
- Pink Lemonade — classic UK sweet-shop lemonade.
- Strawberry Ice — clean strawberry with mid-cold.
- Blackcurrant Menthol — Ribena on ice, essentially.
- Kiwi Passionfruit Guava — the "KPG" tropical.
- Grape Ice — Vimto-adjacent, cold finish.
- Double Apple — red and green apple blend.
- Pineapple Ice — dry, sharp, not syrupy.
- Mixed Berries — house blend, subtle.
Menthol and mint
- Menthol — pure, cold, no fruit.
- Mad Blue — Lost Mary's blue-raspberry-menthol signature.
- Spearmint — dry, cool, clean.
Drink and dessert
- Cola Ice — cola with a menthol tail.
- Red Energy — Red Bull clone, quite convincing.
- Blueberry Cotton Candy — dessert-sweet, polarising.
- Vanilla Custard — soft, low-cold.
New arrivals continue to drop — check the Vape Daily e-liquids library for tasting notes on every new BM6000 pod as it lands.
How to use the Lost Mary BM6000
To use the BM6000, snap a pod onto the top of the device until it clicks, wait 30 seconds for the wick to prime, then inhale gently through the mouthpiece — there is no button. Charge via USB-C when the LED flashes red, and replace the pod when the flavour tastes burnt or the last drops of liquid are visible through the window.
Step-by-step for first-time users:
- Charge first. Even out of the box, give it 20 minutes on USB-C. Devices ship at roughly 40% factory charge.
- Peel the pod. Remove the silicone stopper from the bottom of the pod. Do not lick it. Yes, people do.
- Click it in. Push the pod firmly onto the device. You should feel a magnetic snap.
- Prime the coil. Wait 30-60 seconds so the mesh wick fully saturates. Skipping this step is the number-one reason for a burnt first puff.
- Draw gently. The BM6000 is MTL. A soft, slow inhale for 2-3 seconds produces better flavour than a hard yank.
- Watch the LED. Green = healthy. Red flashing = charge me. Blinking rapidly on inhale = pod empty.
- Store upright. Prevents e-liquid pooling in the airflow channel.
Charging notes
The 500mAh cell takes roughly 35-45 minutes from flat to full using a standard 5V/1A phone charger. Do not use fast-charge bricks above 2A — the device will draw only what it needs, but consistent over-spec charging shortens the cell life. A full charge should get an average vaper through about a pod and a half, so most people top up daily.
Battery life and pod longevity in real-world use
Realistic battery life is around 300-400 puffs per full charge, and each pod lasts most vapers between 2 and 3 days of moderate use before the flavour drops off and the pod-empty light starts blinking. The headline "6,000 puffs" number holds up for light users but falls to about 4,500 for heavy chain-vapers.
Puff count on any pod device is a function of puff duration. Lost Mary rates the BM6000 on a 1.8-second puff drawing 55mg of aerosol. If your natural draw is 3 seconds — which is typical for someone transitioning off cigarettes — you will get closer to 1,800-2,000 puffs per pod, not 3,000. That is not the device lying; it is physics. Two 2ml pods contain a fixed amount of e-liquid. Longer puffs vape more liquid per puff.
Battery-wise, the 500mAh cell is deliberately small so the device stays pocketable. If you vape heavily you will charge every day; if you are a light user, every 36-48 hours. The USB-C port is on the base, which is a nice change from mid-mounted ports that force you to lay the device on its side.
How much does the Lost Mary BM6000 cost in the UK?
A Lost Mary BM6000 starter kit typically retails for £5.99 in 2026, and a replacement 2-pod pack costs £4.99, giving you around 6,000 puffs for £10.98 all-in — before the October 2026 HMRC duty comes into force. Multi-buy deals frequently drop the effective pod cost to around £4 per pack.
| Item | Typical UK price 2026 | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| BM6000 starter kit (device + 1 pod) | £5.99 | Loss-leader; expect to see £4.99 during promos |
| Replacement 2-pod pack | £4.99 | Any single flavour |
| 3-pack pod bundle | ~£13.50 | Effective £4.50 per pack |
| 10-pack pod bundle | ~£40.00 | Effective £4.00 per pack |
| Post-HMRC duty (Oct 2026 est.) | +£0.88 per pack | £2.20/10ml duty × 4ml per pack |
The £5.99 starter kit price is deliberately close to what the BM600 disposable cost — Lost Mary want the ex-disposable user to feel no sticker shock at the counter. The economics only kick in on the second purchase, when a replacement pod pack costs a pound less than a fresh disposable used to.
Set against the wider category, the BM6000 is at the value end of the market. A refillable kit like the Vaporesso Xros 5 costs £15-20 up front but takes 10ml shortfill bottles that undercut prefilled pods on a cost-per-ml basis. If you can be bothered to refill, refillable wins. If you cannot, the BM6000 is the cheapest low-effort option.
BM6000 vs the disposable-replacement pod-kit market
The BM6000 sits inside a crowded 2026 UK category of disposable-replacement pod kits — most notably the Elf Bar ELFX, SKE Crystal Plus, Hayati Pro Max Plus, IVG Air Bar and Vaporesso XT600. All hit the same price band, all target the ex-disposable user, and all comply with the same TPD and disposable-ban rules. Below is how the BM6000 stacks up.
| Kit | Puffs | Battery | Kit RRP | Pod RRP | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lost Mary BM6000 | ~6,000 | 500mAh | £5.99 | £4.99 / 2 pods | Ex-BM600 loyalists |
| Elf Bar ELFX | ~6,000 | 500mAh | £5.99 | £4.99 / 2 pods | Ex-Elf Bar 600 users |
| SKE Crystal Plus | ~5,500 | 500mAh | £5.99 | £4.99 / 2 pods | Ex-Crystal Bar users |
| Hayati Pro Max Plus 6000 | ~6,000 | 500mAh | £6.99 | £5.99 / 2 pods | Bigger-flavour hits |
| IVG Air Bar | ~5,500 | 500mAh | £5.99 | £4.99 / 2 pods | IVG flavour loyalists |
| Vaporesso XT600 | ~6,000 | 550mAh | £7.99 | £4.99 / 2 pods | Best build quality |
Head-to-head, the BM6000 wins on flavour authenticity for anyone who was a BM600 user — because the recipes are quite literally the same. It matches or slightly under-delivers on build quality vs the Vaporesso XT600, is nearly identical in puff count to the Hayati Pro Max Plus 6000, and is priced at parity with the ELFX and Crystal Plus. The tie-breaker is almost always which brand's flavour bank you already know you like.
Is the Lost Mary BM6000 legal in the UK?
Yes — the Lost Mary BM6000 is fully legal to sell and use in the UK in 2026. It is rechargeable, uses replaceable pods, meets the 2ml tank cap and 20mg/ml nicotine cap of the retained Tobacco Products Directive, is MHRA-notified, and complies with the Single-Use Vapes (England) Regulations 2025 and equivalent Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish legislation.
Three points worth being sharp about:
- Only buy from UK-registered retailers. If a product appears on TikTok or an Instagram DM at half the price with "5% nicotine" labelling, it is a US-spec grey-market unit and is illegal to sell in the UK. Check that the seller lists a UK company registration and displays MHRA notification numbers.
- Age gate. Sale is 18+ under the Nicotine Inhaling Products (Age of Sale and Proxy Purchasing) Regulations 2015. Retailers must Challenge 25.
- Ingredient disclosure. Every legal BM6000 pod is publicly notified on the MHRA e-cigarette register. If you cannot find the flavour there, it is either counterfeit or unregistered — do not buy it.
What about the incoming HMRC vape duty?
From 1 October 2026, HMRC will apply Vaping Products Duty of £2.20 per 10ml of e-liquid, plus a one-off £2.20 tobacco-duty parallel rise. On a BM6000 2-pod pack (which contains 2×2ml = 4ml of e-liquid), that adds roughly 88p per pack, so expect the standard £4.99 pod pack to move to around £5.87 from October 2026 onwards. The starter-kit device is not itself dutied — only the e-liquid inside the initial pod.
Duty is levied on the manufacturer/importer, not the vaper, but in practice it will pass through to shelf prices in full. If you already know you like a flavour, buying stock before October 2026 is legitimately cheaper.
Pros and cons of the Lost Mary BM6000
The BM6000's strengths are flavour authenticity, price, pocketability and near-zero learning curve for ex-disposable users; its weaknesses are the small 500mAh battery, no button or airflow adjustment, and pods that cannot be refilled from a bottle — locking you into Lost Mary's own e-liquid range.
Pros
- Identical flavour to the beloved BM600 disposable — Imiracle appear to use the same juice recipes.
- Fully UK-legal in 2026, MHRA-notified.
- Excellent value: ~£10.98 for 6,000 puffs vs ~£60 for the equivalent disposable stack.
- Very pocketable — 28g with pod fitted.
- Snap-on pods are foolproof; no leaks, no priming a coil, no mess.
- USB-C fast charge in ~40 minutes.
- Roughly 30 flavours at launch, growing.
- Draw-activated, no buttons — matches disposable UX exactly.
Cons
- 500mAh battery — heavy vapers will need to charge daily.
- No airflow adjustment; draw is fixed MTL.
- Pods are prefilled only — no bottle-refill option, so you are locked to Lost Mary flavours.
- No display or puff-counter LED; battery-level indication is a basic red/green LED.
- Coil is integrated with the pod, so a manufacturing dud pod = whole pod binned.
- Long-term environmental cost is only marginally better than the disposable it replaces — the pod itself is still landfill.
- Limited nicotine strength: 20mg only (no 10mg option for lower-strength users).
Common problems and how to fix them
Most BM6000 issues fall into three buckets: burnt flavour on the first puff, no vapour with a red flashing LED, or a leaky pod. All three are usually a symptom of user error rather than a faulty device and are fixable in under a minute.
Burnt taste
Almost always caused by drawing before the mesh coil has saturated. Snap the pod on and leave the device sitting upright for a full minute before your first inhale. If the problem persists past the first ten puffs, the pod is genuinely faulty — most UK retailers will replace a dud pod on receipt.
No vapour / red LED
Battery flat. Plug into USB-C. If it does not charge, check the port for pocket fluff — a cocktail stick fixes 80% of "dead" pod-kit batteries.
Leaking pod
Store the device upright, not flat in a pocket. If e-liquid pools in the airflow channel, blow gently through the coil-end onto a piece of tissue. Do not inhale through a leaking pod — you will get a mouth of nic-salt e-liquid, which tastes appalling and delivers a nicotine hit you did not sign up for.
Weak flavour
Either the pod is near-empty (check the transparent window on the side) or you are chain-vaping and dry-hitting the coil. Wait 30 seconds between puffs.
How does the BM6000 compare to nicotine pouches?
The BM6000 delivers nicotine via inhaled aerosol and is genuinely useful for adults transitioning off cigarettes, but for pure nicotine delivery without lung exposure, tobacco-free nicotine pouches like ZYN, Velo and Nordic Spirit deliver comparable satisfaction at similar or lower cost. Many UK vapers now use both — pouches during work, BM6000 at home.
The nicotine pouches category has grown roughly 40% year-on-year in the UK, driven partly by workplace vape bans and partly by users wanting a nicotine option that leaves no smell. For a full comparison of the strongest UK pouches, see our reviews of ICEBERG, Pablo and Killa. None of these are regulated by the MHRA in the same way vapes are — pouches sit in a lighter general product safety framework — so buy from reputable retailers only.
What are the health considerations of the BM6000?
Vaping is not risk-free but is substantially less harmful than smoking; the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities evidence review continues to conclude that nicotine vaping carries a small fraction of the risks of smoking tobacco. If you have never smoked, do not start vaping. If you smoke, the BM6000 — used to quit — is a rational tool.
Three health-adjacent points specific to the BM6000:
- Nicotine dependence is real. 20mg salt hits fast. If you are on your third pod of the week, you are not "casual".
- Do not modify the device. The 500mAh cell is small but is still a lithium-polymer unit. Puncturing it causes a thermal-runaway fire.
- Second-hand aerosol. Public Health England's 2021 evidence review and successor reports find no significant harm to bystanders, but out of basic courtesy, do not vape in enclosed spaces with children, non-smokers or pregnant women.
For structured quit-smoking help, the NHS Better Health quit-smoking programme is genuinely good, free, and evidence-based. Vapes including the BM6000 are recommended within it.
How does the BM6000 fit into a step-down quit plan?
A common Vape-Daily-reader strategy is to use the BM6000 as a "step-one" quit device, then transition to a refillable pod kit at 10mg salts, then to 5mg salts, then to 0mg / nothing over 3-6 months. Because the BM6000 pod is fixed at 20mg, it works well for the first stage but not the taper.
A realistic timeline:
- Weeks 1-4: Replace all cigarettes with the BM6000 at 20mg. Do not track puffs — track cigarettes not smoked.
- Weeks 5-12: Move to a refillable kit like the Vaporesso Xros 5 or Uwell Caliburn G3, using 10mg nic-salt shortfills. See the e-liquids library for options.
- Months 3-6: Drop to 5mg. Vape less often. Consider pouches during the workday.
- Months 6+: 0mg or off entirely.
The BM6000 is deliberately not designed for this taper — its virtue is nicotine reliability, not flexibility. It is the ideal device for the first month, and a mediocre one for month four.
Environmental impact vs the BM600 disposable
The BM6000 reduces landfill impact per 6,000 puffs by roughly 80% compared to the equivalent stack of ten BM600 disposables, but only if the user actually recharges the device rather than throwing it away when the first pod runs out. Both pod and device contain lithium and should be recycled, not binned.
Under the Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Regulations, any UK retailer selling vape hardware is required to accept the same volume back for recycling, whether they are your original supplier or not. In practice, "take-back" bins are appearing in Tesco, Sainsbury's and most independent vape shops. Please use them. The environmental case for the BM6000 collapses entirely if you treat the device as disposable.
Battery-recycling info specifically: Recycle Now has a postcode-based finder that includes vape hardware.
Where to buy the Lost Mary BM6000 in the UK
The Lost Mary BM6000 is stocked across mainstream UK convenience retail, dedicated vape chains, and specialist online retailers — but only online sellers with UK company registration, published MHRA notification numbers and a UK returns address are worth buying from at scale.
Buying-checklist for a legit BM6000 purchase:
- Retailer has a UK company number visible in the footer.
- Product listing states "20mg nic salt" (not "5% nicotine").
- Product listing states 2ml pod capacity.
- Age-gate on the site before add-to-basket.
- Clear returns policy and UK customer-support contact.
- Batch codes on the pod match the manufacturer's published range.
Vape Daily-curated selection: BM6000 starter kits, BM6000 replacement pods, or browse the wider e-liquid range if you want to add a refillable device to the mix later.
The verdict: is the Lost Mary BM6000 worth buying in 2026?
For an ex-BM600 user, the BM6000 is the most obvious upgrade on the UK market — flavour parity, drastically lower cost per puff, legal, familiar and pocketable. For a first-time vaper switching from cigarettes it is a strong entry-level device, provided you accept that after a few weeks you will probably want a refillable kit for the flexibility of custom nic strengths. For an existing refillable-kit user, there is no reason to switch.
The BM6000 is what a mass-market pod kit is supposed to look like in 2026: cheap, TPD-compliant, disposable-ban-compliant, USB-C, and boring in the good way. Lost Mary have not tried to reinvent anything — they have taken the highest-selling product they ever made, hollowed out the parts the government banned, and rebuilt it as a two-piece system that survives the rules. It works.
Rating: 4.3 / 5 — best-in-class flavour continuity, top-quartile price, average build, small battery.
FAQs
Is the Lost Mary BM6000 legal in the UK?
Yes. The BM6000 is fully compliant with the UK's Single-Use Vapes (England) Regulations 2025, the retained TPD (2ml tank, 20mg nicotine cap) and is MHRA-notified. It is legal to sell and use across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in 2026.
How long does a Lost Mary BM6000 pod last?
Each 2ml pod lasts most vapers 2-3 days of moderate use, or approximately 2,500-3,000 puffs. Heavy users typically get closer to 1,800-2,200 puffs per pod because a longer draw vapes more liquid per puff.
How do you charge the BM6000?
Plug a standard USB-C cable into the port on the base of the device. A full charge from flat takes 35-45 minutes on a 5V/1A phone charger. Avoid fast-charge bricks above 2A, which shorten cell life over time.
Can you refill the BM6000 pods from a bottle?
No. BM6000 pods are prefilled and sealed at the factory. To refill from a bottle of e-liquid you need a refillable kit — see our reviews of the Vaporesso Xros 5 or Uwell Caliburn G3 for the closest refillable equivalents.
What is the BM6000 vs the BM600?
The BM6000 is the rechargeable, refill-pod replacement for the banned BM600 disposable. Same flavours, same brand, same throat hit — but legal in the UK, one-sixth of the per-puff cost, and USB-C rechargeable. The BM600 disposable was banned on 1 June 2025.
How much does a BM6000 cost in the UK?
The starter kit typically retails at £5.99 and a 2-pod replacement pack at £4.99, giving you 6,000 puffs for about £10.98 all-in. Multi-buy bundles push the effective pod pack cost down to around £4. Prices are expected to rise by roughly 88p per pod pack from 1 October 2026, when HMRC's Vaping Products Duty comes into force.
Does the BM6000 come in 10mg nicotine?
No. All BM6000 pods are 20mg/ml nic-salt — the UK legal maximum. For lower strengths you need a refillable pod kit that takes bottled nic-salt e-liquid, which is widely available in 5mg, 10mg and 20mg.
Which BM6000 flavour is closest to the original BM600?
Blueberry Sour Raspberry is the direct flagship carry-over and tastes essentially identical to the BM600 version in blind side-by-side testing. Watermelon Ice, Triple Mango and Cherry Peach Lemonade are also lifted verbatim from the disposable's top-selling flavours.
Is the BM6000 better than the Elf Bar ELFX?
They are near-identical devices from the same parent manufacturer (Imiracle). Choose based on flavour preference: BM6000 if you were a BM600 user, ELFX if you were an Elf Bar 600 user. Puff count, price, battery and build quality are effectively the same.
Is vaping the BM6000 safer than smoking?
Yes — the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities and the NHS both maintain that nicotine vaping carries a small fraction of the risks of smoking tobacco and is an effective quit-smoking aid. It is not risk-free, and non-smokers should not start. See the NHS quit-smoking guidance for context.
Vape Daily is a UK-based vape and nicotine-pouch retailer. All products are sold to over-18s only, in compliance with the Nicotine Inhaling Products (Age of Sale and Proxy Purchasing) Regulations 2015. Nicotine is an addictive substance. If you do not smoke, do not vape.
Frequently asked questions
Is the Lost Mary BM6000 legal in the UK?
Yes. The BM6000 is fully compliant with the UK Single-Use Vapes (England) Regulations 2025, the retained TPD (2ml tank, 20mg nicotine cap) and is MHRA-notified. It is legal to sell and use across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in 2026.
How long does a Lost Mary BM6000 pod last?
Each 2ml pod lasts most vapers 2-3 days of moderate use, or approximately 2,500-3,000 puffs. Heavy users typically get closer to 1,800-2,200 puffs per pod because a longer draw vapes more liquid per puff.
How do you charge the BM6000?
Plug a standard USB-C cable into the port on the base of the device. A full charge from flat takes 35-45 minutes on a 5V/1A phone charger. Avoid fast-charge bricks above 2A, which shorten cell life over time.
Can you refill the BM6000 pods from a bottle?
No. BM6000 pods are prefilled and sealed at the factory. To refill from a bottle you need a refillable kit like the Vaporesso Xros 5 or Uwell Caliburn G3.
What is the BM6000 vs the BM600?
The BM6000 is the rechargeable, refill-pod replacement for the banned BM600 disposable. Same flavours, same brand, same throat hit — but legal, one-sixth of the per-puff cost, and USB-C rechargeable. The BM600 disposable was banned on 1 June 2025.
How much does a BM6000 cost in the UK?
The starter kit typically retails at £5.99 and a 2-pod replacement pack at £4.99, giving you 6,000 puffs for around £10.98 all-in. From 1 October 2026 HMRC's new Vaping Products Duty adds roughly 88p per pod pack.
Does the BM6000 come in 10mg nicotine?
No. All BM6000 pods are 20mg/ml nic-salt — the UK legal maximum. For lower strengths you need a refillable pod kit that takes bottled nic-salt e-liquid, widely available in 5mg, 10mg and 20mg.
Which BM6000 flavour is closest to the original BM600?
Blueberry Sour Raspberry is the direct flagship carry-over and tastes essentially identical to the BM600 version in blind side-by-side testing. Watermelon Ice, Triple Mango and Cherry Peach Lemonade are also lifted verbatim from the disposable's top sellers.
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