RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Tobacco industry marketing to low socioeconomic status women in the USA JF Tobacco Control JO Tob Control FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd SP e139 OP e146 DO 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2013-051224 VO 23 IS e2 A1 Cati G Brown-Johnson A1 Lucinda J England A1 Stanton A Glantz A1 Pamela M Ling YR 2014 UL http://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/content/23/e2/e139.abstract AB Objectives Describe tobacco companies' marketing strategies targeting low socioeconomic status (SES) females in the USA. Methods Analysis of previously secret tobacco industry documents. Results Tobacco companies focused marketing on low SES women starting in the late 1970s, including military wives, low-income inner-city minority women, ‘discount-susceptible’ older female smokers and less-educated young white women. Strategies included distributing discount coupons with food stamps to reach the very poor, discount offers at point-of-sale and via direct mail to keep cigarette prices low, developing new brands for low SES females and promoting luxury images to low SES African-American women. More recently, companies integrated promotional strategies targeting low-income women into marketing plans for established brands. Conclusions Tobacco companies used numerous marketing strategies to reach low SES females in the USA for at least four decades. Strategies to counteract marketing to low SES women could include (1) counteracting price discounts and direct mail coupons that reduce the price of tobacco products, (2) instituting restrictions on point-of-sale advertising and retail display and (3) creating counteradvertising that builds resistance to psychosocial targeting of low SES women. To achieve health equity, tobacco control efforts are needed to counteract the influence of tobacco industry marketing to low-income women.