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MTL vs DTL vs RDL: Vaping Styles Explained

By shane margereson  •   7 minute read   •   Last updated: February 18, 2026

MTL, DTL and RDL are the three main vaping styles. Each one gives you a different draw, different cloud size and works best with different e-liquids. Picking the right style from the start makes a real difference to how much you enjoy vaping.

This guide covers what MTL, DTL and RDL actually mean, what kit and e-liquid each one needs, and how to work out which suits you.

What Is MTL Vaping?

MTL stands for mouth-to-lung and it's the most common style for new vapers. You pull vapour into your mouth first, pause for a second, then breathe it down into your lungs. It's the same action as smoking a cigarette, and that's why most people switching from smoking start here.

MTL vaping uses higher resistance coils, usually 0.8 ohm and above. You run them at lower wattages between 8 and 25W. Airflow is set tight so you get a restricted draw with a noticeable throat hit.

For e-liquid, nic salts between 10 and 20mg work best for MTL. A 50/50 VG/PG mix wicks well in higher resistance coils and carries flavour well. Freebase nicotine at 6 to 12mg also works if you want a sharper throat feel.

MTL Specs

Detail

Coil resistance

0.8 ohm and above

Wattage

8 to 25W

Airflow

Tight, restricted

Nicotine

10 - 20mg nic salt or 6 - 12mg freebase

E-liquid ratio

50/50 VG/PG

Cloud size

Small

Throat hit

Strong

What Is DTL Vaping?

DTL stands for direct-to-lung and it's aimed at vapers who want bigger clouds and warmer vapour. Instead of holding vapour in your mouth, you breathe it straight into your lungs in one go. It feels more like taking a deep breath than smoking, and it takes a bit of getting used to if you're coming from cigarettes.

DTL uses sub-ohm coils below 0.5 ohm at higher wattages, typically 40W and above. Airflow sits wide open so you can pull a full lung hit without any restriction. You get bigger clouds, warmer vapour and more concentrated flavour.

Shortfill e-liquids are the standard for DTL because of their high VG content. High VG mixes at 70/30 or 80/20 create thick clouds and need the extra heat from sub-ohm coils to vaporise. Keep nicotine at 3 to 6mg max for DTL because the large vapour volume makes anything stronger and very harsh.

DTL Specs

Detail

Coil resistance

Below 0.5 ohm

Wattage

40W and above

Airflow

Wide open

Nicotine

0 to 6mg (freebase or nic shot)

E-liquid ratio

70/30 or 80/20 VG/PG

Cloud size

Large

Throat hit

Mild to none

What Is RDL Vaping?

RDL stands for restricted direct-to-lung and it's grown popular in the last couple of years. It sits right between MTL and DTL in terms of draw and vapour. You still inhale directly to your lungs like DTL, but the airflow is partly closed off so the draw feels tighter. You get more vapour than MTL but without the full intensity of DTL.

RDL has picked up a lot of popularity because it gives you a good balance. You get decent clouds and solid flavour without needing to run high wattages or go through juice as fast as DTL. A lot of vapers land on RDL after trying both MTL and DTL and wanting something in between.

Coils between 0.4 and 0.8 ohm work well for RDL at 15 to 35W. For e-liquid you've got more flexibility with RDL than either of the other two styles. Nic salts at 6 to 10mg or shortfills at 3 to 6mg both work. A 60/40 or 70/30 VG/PG mix handles the slightly higher wattage without being too thick for the coil to wick.

RDL Specs

Detail

Coil resistance

0.4 to 0.8 ohm

Wattage

15 to 35W

Airflow

Partially restricted

Nicotine

6 to 10mg nic salt or 3 to 6mg freebase

E-liquid ratio

60/40 or 70/30 VG/PG

Cloud size

Medium

Throat hit

Moderate

MTL vs DTL: Key Differences

At its simplest, the difference between MTL and DTL is the draw. MTL mimics the feel and action of smoking a cigarette. DTL is a completely different experience from anything related to cigarette smoking. Everything else follows from that, including the coil, wattage, e-liquid and nicotine strength you need.


MTL

DTL

Draw style

Mouth first, then lungs

Straight to lungs

Feels like

Smoking a cigarette

Taking a deep breath

Coil

0.8 ohm+

Below 0.5 ohm

Wattage

8 to 25W

40W+

Nicotine

10 to 20mg nic salt

0 to 6mg

E-liquid

50/50

70/30 or 80/20

Clouds

Small, discreet

Large

Throat hit

Strong

Mild

Juice usage

Low

High

Battery drain

Low

High

If you're switching from cigarettes, MTL is the easier transition. The throat hit and draw will feel familiar from day one. DTL works better for vapers who've moved past that stage and want bigger flavour and clouds.

RDL vs MTL

RDL and MTL share some ground but they feel different in practice. MTL is tighter, lower powered and works best with nic salts at higher strengths. RDL opens the airflow up a notch and runs at slightly higher wattages for more vapour without the full DTL commitment.

The biggest practical difference between RDL and MTL is e-liquid flexibility. MTL works best with 50/50 mixes and nicotine at 10mg or above. RDL handles both nic salts and shortfills, so you've got more choice in what you vape. If MTL feels too tight and DTL feels like too much, try RDL with a 0.6 ohm coil and the airflow half open.

Best E-Liquid for Each Vaping Style

Getting the right e-liquid for your vaping style matters as much as picking the right kit. The wrong VG/PG ratio won't wick and the wrong nicotine strength will either be too harsh or leave you unsatisfied.

Style

Best E-Liquid

Nicotine

Why

MTL

50/50 nic salt

10 to 20mg

Thinner liquid wicks in high-ohm coils, smooth throat hit

DTL

High VG shortfill 70/30+

0 to 6mg

Thick liquid needs sub-ohm heat, low nic avoids harshness

RDL

60/40 to 70/30 nic salt or shortfill

3 to 10mg

Mid-range viscosity suits 0.4 to 0.8 ohm coils

One common mistake is using high VG shortfills in an MTL kit. High VG liquid is too thick for higher resistance coils to wick, so you'll get dry hits and burnt coils. Going the other way, running high nicotine nic salts through a DTL sub-ohm coil at 50W will be uncomfortably strong.

Are Disposable Vapes MTL or DTL?

Most disposable vapes on the market use an MTL draw. They use higher resistance coils with tight airflow and come filled with nic salt e-liquid at 10 or 20mg. Draw feels similar to a cigarette and they're built to mimic that experience.

Some larger disposables and prefilled pod kits offer an RDL draw with a slightly looser pull and lower coil resistance. If you're moving from disposables to a refillable kit, an MTL pod kit with 20mg nic salt will feel the most familiar.

Vaporesso XROS vs Luxe: MTL or DTL?

The Vaporesso XROS range is built around MTL and RDL vaping. XROS pods use higher resistance coils at 0.6 ohm and above with adjustable airflow that goes from tight MTL to a loose RDL pull. If you want a cigarette-style draw with nic salts, the XROS is the range to look at.

The Vaporesso Luxe range covers MTL through to DTL depending on the pod and coil you use. The Luxe XR Max 2 goes up to 80W with 0.2 ohm GTX coils for full DTL. Fit a higher resistance pod and it handles MTL just as well. It's the more flexible of the two ranges if you want to try different styles without buying a second kit.

Vaporesso Armour G vs Luxe XR Max 2

Both the Armour G and Luxe XR Max 2 run up to 80W on Vaporesso's GTX coil range. They handle MTL with a 1.2 ohm coil and DTL with a 0.2 ohm, so both cover all three vaping styles.

The Armour G has a 3000mAh built-in battery and a leather grip panel. On the Luxe side, the XR Max 2 has a slightly larger juice capacity and a different pod shape. If you're choosing between them for DTL specifically, either one will do the job at 55 to 80W with a sub-ohm GTX coil. For a full breakdown of each kit, check the product pages linked above.

How to Pick the Right Vaping Style

If you're not sure where to start, here's a quick way to narrow it down.

Start with MTL if you:

  • Are switching from cigarettes or disposables
  • Want a familiar smoking-style draw
  • Prefer smaller, pocket-friendly kits
  • Want to use nic salts at 10 to 20mg

Try DTL if you:

  • Have been vaping for a while and want more vapour
  • Enjoy bigger clouds and warmer draws
  • Are happy using 0 to 6mg nicotine
  • Don't mind going through more e-liquid

Go for RDL if you:

  • Find MTL too tight but DTL too airy
  • Want decent clouds without high wattage
  • Like the flexibility of using nic salts or shortfills
  • Want one kit that sits comfortably in the middle

A lot of vapers end up owning more than one kit. An MTL pod for when you're out and a DTL or RDL setup for home is a common combination. There's no rule that says you have to pick one style and stick with it.

About the author: Shane Margereson

Shane's been in the vaping industry for over a decade and there aren't many kits he hasn't tried first-hand. He started as a hobbyist but these days you'll find him with a pod kit and dessert nic salts – though he'll still pick up the odd limited edition setup if it's a beauty.

As owner of Ecigone, he's tested hundreds of devices and knows the market inside out. He's also a big fan of OXVA Vapes, which you'll notice when you read his reviews. If Shane doesn't know about it, it's probably not worth talking about.