Leaking from the bottom
Remove the pod, dry the contacts, check for cracks or worn seals and try a fresh pod if leaking returns.
Replace podsIf your OXVA is leaking, the cause is usually pod wear, a loose seal, overfilling, condensation buildup, leaving the device on its side, or using liquid that does not suit the pod.
Most OXVA leaks are not caused by a faulty device body. They are usually caused by an old pod, worn seals, overfilling, liquid collecting under the pod, or pressure changes after filling. Start by removing the pod, wiping the pod bay dry, checking for cracks or loose seals, and making sure the pod is clipped in properly.
OXVA leaks usually happen for practical reasons rather than mysterious ones. In most cases, once you identify where the liquid is escaping from, the fix becomes much easier.
Pods do not last forever. As the seal weakens and the internal wick ages, liquid control can become less stable. Older pods are much more likely to leak, flood or spit.
Overfilling leaves no room for pressure changes inside the pod. That can push liquid into the airflow path or cause seepage after you close the fill port.
If the side-fill or top-fill section is not fully sealed, the pod can slowly seep liquid even when everything else looks fine.
Sometimes what looks like a leak is repeated condensation buildup. If you do not clean the pod bay often, that liquid can gather and feel like a real leak.
If the pod is slightly loose, not clipped in correctly, or there is dirt around the contact area, the fit may not be clean and liquid can collect around the base.
Very thin liquids can move too easily through some pods. Sweet liquids can also shorten pod life and make leaking or flooding more likely over time.
The place you see liquid tells you a lot about the likely cause.
Usually condensation, a worn seal, or a pod that is not sitting quite right. Clean it first, then check again after a few hours of normal use.
Often caused by overfilling, pressure changes after filling, or a flooded pod. This can also happen if the pod has been left lying down.
Usually means the plug, cap or fill section is not fully sealed, or the rubber seal has started to wear out.
That is usually flooding rather than a device body leak. Too much liquid has entered the coil chamber or airflow path.
That strongly points to overfilling, trapped pressure, or not letting the pod settle properly after the refill.
That usually means the pod itself is past its best, cracked, or no longer sealing properly. Replace it before blaming the device.
Take the pod out, wipe the pod bay, contacts and pod base with tissue or a dry cloth. Start from a completely dry setup.
Do not fill to the absolute top. Leave a small air gap, close the seal properly, and wipe away any liquid around the fill area.
After filling, keep the device upright for a few minutes instead of laying it down straight away.
If the same pod keeps leaking after you have cleaned and refilled it properly, replacing the pod is usually the fastest solution.
If the liquid feels unusually thin or the pod is flooding often, try a liquid type that better suits your device and pod style.
Many pod devices behave better when stored upright, especially after filling or when carried for longer periods.
Replace the pod if you notice one or more of these:
In most real-world cases, a leaking OXVA is solved faster by changing the pod than by endlessly trying to rescue an old one.
A small amount of moisture under the pod is common. If it appears slowly and wipes away easily, that is often condensation rather than a true leak.
If you hear gurgling or get liquid in your mouth, that can be flooding inside the pod rather than liquid escaping from the outside of the device.
Sometimes the issue is just leftover liquid from the refill process sitting around the seal or pod base.
An old pod can start performing badly in several ways at once. Leaking may just be one sign that the pod is ready to be changed.
The most common reasons are overfilling, not sealing the fill area properly, or laying the device down straight after the refill.
Most of the time it is the pod, not the device body. Worn pods, poor seals and refill mistakes are much more common causes.
If it keeps leaking after cleaning and checking the seal, it is usually better to replace it rather than keep using it.
Yes. A small amount of moisture under the pod can be normal condensation, especially with regular use. The key is whether it keeps building up heavily or starts affecting performance.
Sweet liquid is more often linked to reduced pod life and buildup, which can contribute to poor pod performance over time. It is not always the direct cause, but it can make problems appear sooner.
If leaking is only part of the issue, use the support routes below for better next steps.
This is the general leaking target. Refill leaks, airflow leaks and bottom leaks can look different, but the checks are similar: seal, filling, pod age, liquid thickness and condensation.
Remove the pod, dry the contacts, check for cracks or worn seals and try a fresh pod if leaking returns.
Replace podsAirflow leaks usually come from flooding, condensation, overfilling or liquid that is too thin for the pod.
Refill without leaksLeave a small air gap, close the bung fully and wipe the base before refitting the pod.
Refill guideUse the model manual to confirm pod seating and airflow behaviour before changing device.
Open manualsAdult UK vape users only. Stop using a device that is hot, wet, swollen, physically damaged or behaving electrically unsafe.