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Healthpalantir

Palantir and other tech companies are stocking offices with nicotine products to increase worker productivity

Catherina Gioino
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Catherina Gioino
Catherina Gioino
News Editor
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Catherina Gioino
By
Catherina Gioino
Catherina Gioino
News Editor
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March 4, 2026, 3:05 AM ET
Tech companies are stocking nicotine pouches to increase worker productivity.
Tech companies are stocking nicotine pouches to increase worker productivity.Robert Michael—picture alliance/Getty Images
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Puff, puff, pass the spreadsheets.

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Tech companies like Palantir and Hello Patient are stocking office vending machines with nicotine products to increase productivity among employees—and it seems to be working.

Nicotine startups Lucy and Sesh have installed branded vending machines in Palantir’s Washington, D.C., office, full of nicotine pouches that are leaving employees zipped up and ready to work.

Long a safer (and legal) alternative to the drugs that Wall Street bankers of old would use to follow market updates, tobacco products have started to make a comeback in the workplace, especially in the form of nicotine products as companies like Zyn and On! offer a less invasive way to get that nicotine high without clouding up office air.

Now, as companies stock their fridges with these pouches—usually the size of a piece of gum that remains tucked between one’s gums and cheek—they’re seeing an increased byproduct of the new office treat: If you can’t get them hooked on the work, get them hooked on the office perks.

The pouches are available for free in Palantir’s offices for employees and guests over the age of 21, a Palantir spokesperson told the Wall Street Journal. Palantir, which did not respond to requests for comment, pays to stock the products. 

Eliano A. Younes, Palantir’s head of strategic engagement, posted a photo on X of a Lucy-branded vending machine filled with nicotine products, with the caption: “Palantir DC Office 🤝 @LucyNicotine 😵‍💫 🚀.”

Sesh, in particular, has a special tie to Palantir: it received $40 million in funding from Palantir cofounder Joe Lonsdale’s 8VC firm, and the cofounder even helped the company scale up, with Lonsdale previously telling Fortune he was drawn to Sesh because it was a smoke-free alternative to other products. “People don’t want to vape anymore,” he told Fortune.

No smoke without fire

Palantir’s move is just one of the ways biohacking has taken the Silicon Valley tech space by storm. As people in the tech world become microcelebrities in their own right thanks to the extent they take their biohacking—Bryan Johnson for one gets transfusions of his teenage son’s plasma—the influx of biohacking clinics has led to people taking health matters into their own hands. 

(Culturally, Zyn has a certain cachet among right-of-center figures such as Joe Rogan and Jake Paul, with Max Read coining the phrase “Zynternet” to describe the online aesthetic of pretty much anything Joe Rogan–tinted. Palantir, cofounded by Peter Thiel and notable as a unique firm that offers consulting, defense contracting, and artificial intelligence, is arguably a Zynternet poster child. Lucy and Sesh made these vending machines—none of which contain Zyn products—and it’s unclear if the machines were intentionally aligned with that specific culture.)

However, doctors have offered a blunt warning against using tobacco as a means to biohack, saying the evidence is pretty clear tobacco has significant, long-term health effects. The biohacking in this case, however, is done with nicotine products instead.

Although most states have considered and labeled the pouches as a tobacco product, they don’t contain any tobacco, and are instead made from the plant fiber cellulose. There’s a blend of nicotine powder in the pouch, which is then mixed with sweeteners and flavoring. Because the pouch is placed between one’s gums and cheek, the nicotine enters the bloodstream directly, no smoking or spitting needed. 

“That’s what this new product is touting: that it’s a smoke-free alternative,” wrote Jennifer Cofer of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.

“If your goal is to be free of the addiction, oral nicotine pouches are not the best way to go,” her statement read.

This sentiment is echoed by another tech startup that has also started to put vending machines in its offices.

Alex Cohen, founder of the AI-powered health care app Hello Patient, said he also brought a nicotine-pouch fridge to the Austin-based office—but the results weren’t worth the squeeze.

“They were very productive, so I thought, ‘Maybe there’s something here,’” he told the Wall Street Journal, referencing when he saw Zyn tins on engineers’ desks. 

After going through two or three pouches a day, he knew he had to stop.

“Then, I accidentally got addicted,” he told the Journal.

In response to a request for comment from Fortune, Cohen said he was trying to be “intentionally hyperbolic.”

“I only really use them during the day at work and don’t keep them at home,” Cohen said. “Accidentally getting addicted is something very on brand for me to say to be funny,” adding that he still only partakes “in small doses and only when I’m working.”

This story was updated to include comments from Alex Cohen.

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Catherina Gioino
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