Dab Torches

44 products

Dab torches deliver the precise, high-heat flame your banger actually needs, and we carry every style worth lighting up with.

Why a Dedicated Torch Makes All the Difference

A standard lighter tops out well below what quartz or titanium needs to get cherry-red. Dab torches run on butane and push flame temperatures up to around 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit, hot enough to fully charge a banger in seconds and evenly enough to vaporize concentrate cleanly rather than scorching it. If your hits taste burnt or your nail is never quite hot enough, the torch is almost always the fix.

Types of Dab Torches We Carry

Pocket and Handheld Torches

Compact butane torches fit in a drawer or a bag without taking over your whole setup. They produce a focused, pencil-thin flame that works great for small bangers and single dabs. Good choice if you dab at the couch and refill is easy to grab.

Tabletop Torches

Bigger body means a bigger fuel reservoir and a wider, more powerful flame. Tabletop torches heat large bangers and thick nails faster and with less wrist fatigue. They sit flat on your tray and stay put while you focus on the dab. If you're a heavy daily user, the larger tank means fewer refills interrupting your session.

Multi-Flame Torches

Some torches run dual or triple flame heads, blasting heat across a wider surface area in less time. These are especially useful for larger nails or bucket-style bangers where a single-point flame can create hot spots. More flame coverage means more even heat distribution from edge to edge.

What to Look for When Choosing a Dab Torch

Not all butane torches are built the same. Here's what actually matters when you're picking one out.

  • Flame lock or safety lock: A torch that can lock its flame on lets you heat a nail hands-free. A safety lock keeps it from accidentally igniting in a bag or pocket. Both are worth having.
  • Fuel window: A clear or translucent tank lets you see exactly how much butane is left. Running dry mid-session is its own special kind of frustrating.
  • Adjustable flame: You want control. A dial that lets you dial the flame up or down means you can work with different nail sizes and materials without swapping torches.
  • Refillable design: All good dab torches are refillable with standard butane canisters. Single-use lighters have no place in a serious dab setup.
  • Stability: Tabletop models should have a flat, weighted base that won't tip when the tank is nearly empty and light.

Torch Tips Worth Knowing

Use triple-refined or higher-purity butane to keep the torch nozzle clean and extend the life of the igniter. Cheap butane leaves residue that clogs jets and throws off the flame. Let your banger cool down after heating before estimating temperature by sight. Cold start dabs, where you load concentrate first and then apply gentle heat, are a technique worth exploring if you want smoother, lower-temp hits without a carb cap swap.

Curious about technique and which torches hold up over time? Our breakdown of the best torches for dabbing covers the real-world differences between styles and what we actually recommend.

Frequently Asked Questions

What kind of butane should I use in a dab torch?

Triple-refined butane is the minimum. Higher refinement means fewer impurities passing through the jet, which keeps the flame consistent and the igniter working longer. Budget butane is a false economy when it costs you a torch nozzle.

How do I know when my banger is at the right temperature?

Visual cues help. Heat until the banger starts to glow faintly, then let it cool for 30 to 60 seconds depending on thickness before dropping your concentrate in. An infrared thermometer takes the guesswork out entirely and is a worthwhile add-on to any serious setup.

Can I use a kitchen torch for dabbing?

Technically yes, but kitchen torches are often under-powered for thicker quartz and have flame heads designed for culinary work, not nail geometry. A dedicated dab torch heats more evenly, holds a steadier flame angle, and usually has a longer nozzle that keeps your hands further from the heat.

How often should I refill my dab torch?

That depends entirely on how often you dab and what size tank your torch has. Pocket torches might need a refill every few days for a regular user. A large tabletop model can go a week or two. Keep a spare butane canister on hand and you will never have to find out the hard way that you are out of fuel.