Bong Bowl Pieces

34 products

Bong bowl pieces do more than hold your herb: the size, shape, and depth all affect your draw, your airflow, and how evenly everything burns.

Every Style of Bowl Piece We Carry

We stock a deep selection of bowl pieces built for every joint size and smoking preference. Here's what you'll find in our collection:

Bubble Bowl Pieces

The rounded, globe-style bottom packs a bigger load than a flat bowl and keeps your herb centered over the hole. Bubble bowls are one of our most-searched styles, and for good reason. They hit smoothly and look great on any setup.

Skull and Novelty Bowls

If you want your bowl to say something, skull bowls and sculpted novelty pieces do the talking. These are fully functional, just with a lot more character. Great for gifting, great for keeping on your shelf.

Cauldron and Deep-Dish Bowls

Cauldron-style bowls are built wide and deep, which means more herb per session and a slower, more even burn. If you share your piece often, a deep-dish bowl is worth the upgrade.

Standard Funnel Bowls

The classic shape. A funnel bowl fits most bongs right out of the box and is easy to clean, easy to pack, and easy to replace when you need one fast.

Choosing the Right Joint Size

This is the one thing you have to get right before anything else. A bowl that doesn't fit your joint is a bowl that doesn't work. Here's the quick breakdown:

  • 10mm bowls fit smaller rigs and mini bongs. If you're working with a petite setup, this is your size. Check out our mini bongs if you're building a small kit from scratch.
  • 14mm bowls are the most common size. Most mid-size bongs ship with a 14mm female joint, so this is the safest starting point if you're not sure.
  • 18mm bowls are for larger, high-volume pieces. If you've got a big beaker bong or a wide-base tube, chances are you need an 18mm bowl.

Also pay attention to gender. Most bowl pieces are male, meaning they slide into the female joint on your bong. Double-check before you order.

What to Look for in a Bowl Piece

Not all bowls are made the same, and a few details make a real difference in day-to-day use.

  • Glass thickness: Thicker glass holds up better to heat cycling and the occasional fumble. Thin glass bowls break faster. Simple.
  • Screen or built-in diffuser holes: Some bowls have a single center hole, others have a multi-hole design that prevents pull-through without needing a separate screen. If you hate picking ash out of your water, look for the multi-hole style. You can also grab dedicated bong screens to drop in any bowl.
  • Handle or grip area: A small built-in handle makes removing a hot bowl way easier. This matters more than you'd think after the first burn.
  • Depth and capacity: Solo smokers usually don't need a massive bowl. If you're passing it around, size up.

Pairing Your Bowl with the Right Bong

A new bowl piece can genuinely change how a bong hits. Swapping a shallow funnel for a deep bubble bowl on the same bong gives you a longer, more gradual session. If you're shopping for a new piece to go with it, browse our full bongs collection or go straight to glass bongs if that's your material of choice. For heavily filtered setups, percolator bongs pair well with bowls that have a tighter restriction so you don't lose airflow.

And if you're building out a complete kit, check our bong accessories section for everything else you need to keep your piece running right.

Keeping Your Bowl Clean

Resin buildup in a bowl piece changes the flavor fast. A quick iso-and-salt soak handles most buildup, but if you want to go deeper, our bong cleaners collection has the right solutions for glass. Our bong blog also covers cleaning methods and maintenance tips if you want the full rundown.

Frequently Asked Questions

What size bowl piece fits my bong?

Measure the inner diameter of your bong's joint. A 10mm joint needs a 10mm bowl, a 14mm needs a 14mm, and so on. If you're not sure, 14mm is the most common size for mid-size bongs sold in the US. When in doubt, measure before you buy.

What is a bubble bowl piece?

A bubble bowl has a rounded, spherical base instead of a flat or funnel-shaped one. The curved bottom packs more herb and tends to burn more evenly than a flat bowl. It's a popular upgrade for people who want a little more from each session.

Do I need a screen with my bowl piece?

It depends on the bowl. Single-hole bowls often benefit from a screen to prevent ash and small bits of herb from pulling through into the water. Multi-hole bowls usually handle this on their own. Either way, bong screens are cheap and worth keeping around.

Can I use any bowl piece with any bong?

As long as the joint size matches and the gender is correct, yes. A 14mm male bowl fits a 14mm female joint on a bong. Beyond that, bowl style is purely personal preference. For more on how different pieces work together, our bong guides are a solid starting point.