Gravity Bongs

49 products

Gravity bongs solve one problem really well: getting the most smoke out of the least amount of herb, in one clean pull.

What Makes a Gravity Bong Different

Unlike a standard bong where you clear smoke through a downstem and water chamber, a gravity bong uses the force of descending or displaced water to pull smoke into a chamber. You load the bowl, lower or lift the vessel, and let physics do the work. The result is a thick, dense hit that fills the chamber fast. One rip from a gravity bong can deliver what a traditional piece takes two or three hits to match. That's the appeal, and it's why these pieces have built a loyal following well beyond the DIY plastic-bottle crowd.

Types of Gravity Bongs We Carry

Bucket Gravity Bongs

The classic setup: a smaller vessel sits inside a larger water-filled bucket or base. You push the inner chamber down, pack the bowl, then slowly lift it back up as you light. Smoke fills the chamber fast. Lift it out, remove the bowl, and inhale. Simple, punishing, effective. Most of the bucket-style pieces we carry are made from glass or thick silicone, so you're not wrestling with a flimsy bottle.

Gravity Infusers

Gravity infusers are the refined, tabletop version of the concept. Instead of dunking a bottle in a bucket, these use a sealed globe or hourglass-style chamber that rotates or tilts to control airflow through water. The smoke is filtered and infused as it moves through the chamber, which smooths out the hit considerably. They look great on a shelf and hit even better than they look. If you've searched for a gravity infuser bong, this is the category you want.

Waterfall Bongs

A variation on the gravity theme, waterfall bongs drain water from the bottom of the chamber rather than pulling a vessel upward. As the water escapes, it draws air through the bowl and fills the chamber with smoke. The mechanism is slightly different but the payoff is the same: a chamber packed with smoke, ready to clear in one go.

Silicone and Acrylic Gravity Bongs

Not every gravity bong needs to be glass. Silicone gravity bongs are tough, travel-friendly, and a lot harder to break when you're passing them around. They work just as well mechanically and are easy to clean. If you want something more rugged without sacrificing the experience, check out our silicone bongs section alongside this collection.

What to Look for When Choosing a Gravity Bong

A few things worth paying attention to before you buy:

  • Material: Glass gives you the cleanest flavor and looks the best, but it's fragile. Silicone and acrylic are more forgiving and better for travel or outdoor use.
  • Chamber size: Bigger chambers hold more smoke, which means bigger hits. If you're new to gravity bongs, start smaller. These things hit hard.
  • Base stability: A gravity bong that tips over mid-session is a bad time. Look for a wide, stable base or a design that sits flat without wobbling.
  • Bowl compatibility: Most gravity bongs use standard 14mm or 10mm bowls, so you can swap in your favorite if the included one doesn't suit you.
  • Ease of cleaning: The more complex the water path, the harder it is to clean. Simpler designs stay cleaner longer. Our bong cleaning guide covers the best methods regardless of style.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does a gravity bong work?

A gravity bong uses water displacement or water pressure to pull smoke into a sealed chamber. As water moves down or away from the bowl, it creates negative pressure that draws smoke in to fill the void. When you're ready to inhale, you remove the bowl and clear the chamber in one breath. The hits are dense because the smoke is concentrated rather than diffused through a long water path.

Are gravity bongs harsher than regular bongs?

They can be, especially if you're using a large chamber and clearing it fast. The smoke tends to be thicker and less filtered than what you'd get from a percolator bong. That said, gravity infuser styles do run smoke through water, which takes some of the edge off. If you want smoother hits from a gravity setup, look for designs with a water filtration stage built in.

What's the difference between a gravity bong and a gravity infuser?

A gravity infuser is a specific style of gravity bong, usually a premium, enclosed design that passes smoke through water as it moves between chambers. Traditional gravity bongs (bucket or waterfall style) pull smoke into an open chamber without as much filtration. Infusers are generally smoother and more polished in design. We get into the full breakdown in our post on why gravity hookahs and infusers have taken off.

Can I make a gravity bong at home?

Yes, and plenty of people have. A plastic bottle and a bucket will get the job done in a few minutes. We actually have a full walkthrough in our guide on how to make a homemade gravity bong. That said, a purpose-built glass or silicone gravity bong is safer, hits cleaner, and lasts a lot longer than any DIY setup. Once you've used a real one, it's hard to go back to a water bottle.

Shop More Bong Styles

If gravity bongs aren't quite the right fit, we've got plenty of other directions to go. Browse our full bong collection for every style and size, check out glass bongs for clean-hitting classics, or explore beaker bongs for stable, hard-hitting staples. Our bong blog is also a solid resource if you want to dig deeper before deciding.