Vape Tanks

39 products

Every vape tank we carry earns its spot, from entry-level wax atomizers that screw onto any 510 battery to high-output dab tanks built for the most demanding box mods.

What Counts as a Vape Tank (and What You Actually Need)

"Vape tank" covers a lot of ground. At its most basic, a tank is the chamber that holds your material and houses the heating element, sitting on top of a battery or mod to complete the setup. The three main categories we stock are wax tanks, dry herb tanks, and concentrate atomizers designed to work with box mods. If you're looking to build a modular rig rather than buy a single all-in-one device, a tank is where you start. Pair it with one of our vape batteries or a full-size mod, and you're set.

Types of Vape Tanks in Our Collection

Wax Atomizers and Wax Tanks

These are the most popular tanks we move. A wax atomizer typically uses a coil, quartz bucket, or ceramic cup to vaporize concentrate, then threads onto a 510-connection battery. Coil type matters here: ceramic tends to produce smoother, more flavorful hits at lower temps, while quartz heats faster and hits harder. If you run wax regularly, having a backup atomizer on hand is smart. Coils burn out, and nothing kills a session faster than a dead heating element with no replacement.

Dab Tanks for Box Mods

Dab tanks are built for higher wattage and pair with variable-voltage box mods rather than slim pen batteries. They give you more control over your dab, letting you dial in temperature precisely instead of relying on preheat presets. If you already run a box mod for nicotine vaping, there's a good chance you can put a quality wax atomizer on it. Check the 510-thread compatibility and wattage range before you buy.

Dry Herb Vaporizer Tanks

Dry herb tanks use a convection or conduction chamber to heat flower without combustion. They're less common than wax setups but deliver a clean, discreet vapor that's worth it for people who prefer flower over concentrate. Not every battery supports dry herb tanks, so pairing matters. Browse our full vapes collection if you want a dedicated dry herb vaporizer instead of a modular setup.

What to Look For When Choosing a Vape Tank

A few things separate a tank you'll use for years from one that ends up in a drawer after a month.

  • 510-thread compatibility. The vast majority of tanks and batteries use the 510 standard. Confirm your battery or mod uses it before ordering.
  • Coil material. Quartz, ceramic, and titanium all behave differently. Quartz is fast and intense. Ceramic is smooth and efficient. Titanium is durable but needs proper seasoning.
  • Chamber size. Bigger chambers hold more material but can waste concentrate if you don't clear the hit. Smaller chambers are better for microdosing.
  • Wattage range. Box mod users need to match the tank's recommended wattage to what their mod puts out. Running a low-wattage atomizer at high power burns coils fast.
  • Airflow design. Direct lung setups pull air straight into your lungs for bigger hits. Mouth-to-lung designs mimic a cigarette draw and suit people who want tighter, more controlled vapor.

For more guidance on getting the most from your setup, our vapes blog covers coil care, temperature tips, and gear breakdowns worth reading before you buy.

Pairing Your Tank

A tank is only half the equation. If you need a battery to run it, our vape batteries and vape pens are stocked with 510-compatible options across every price range. Need coils, mouthpieces, or cleaning tools? Our vape accessories collection keeps your setup running without hunting down parts from three different places.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between a wax atomizer and a dab tank?

The terms overlap, but generally a wax atomizer refers to a compact 510-thread attachment designed for pen-style batteries, while a dab tank is built for higher-wattage box mods. Dab tanks tend to have larger chambers and handle more material per session. Both vaporize concentrate, just at different power levels and with different hardware requirements.

Can I use a vape tank with any box mod?

Most tanks use the 510-thread standard, so they'll physically attach to most box mods. The key is wattage compatibility. Check the tank's recommended wattage range and make sure your mod can run within that window. Running a tank outside its rated wattage will shorten coil life and compromise vapor quality. Our dabbing blog has a solid breakdown of mod and atomizer pairing if you want the full rundown.

How often should I replace my vape tank coil?

It depends on how hard you're running it. Light daily use can stretch a coil a few weeks. Heavy sessions with dense concentrate will burn through one faster. Signs it's time: burnt taste, reduced vapor, or visible darkening of the coil material. Always prime a new coil before firing it, and you'll get more life out of each one.

Do dry herb vape tanks work with regular 510 batteries?

Some do, but dry herb tanks typically require more power than a slim pen battery delivers. Most work best with a dedicated dry herb vaporizer battery or a variable-voltage mod with enough output. If you're committed to flower over concentrate, a purpose-built dry herb vaporizer from our vapes collection will almost always outperform a modular tank setup.

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