
Look, most people don't think much about how they store their concentrates. They grab whatever's nearby, toss their wax in it, and wonder why their shatter turned into soup two weeks later or their live resin lost all its terps. Storage matters more than people realize, and the silicone pipes vs glass debate extends well beyond smoking gear into how we store the good stuff too.
The two real contenders for concentrate storage are silicone containers and glass jars. Both work. But they work differently, and choosing the wrong one for your situation is an easy mistake to make.
For daily home use with premium live resin or rosin, glass jars win on flavor preservation. For travel, clumsy hands, or budget storage, silicone containers are the practical choice.
The best container for concentrate storage depends on the type of concentrate and how you plan to use it. Glass jars preserve terpene profiles better for long-term storage, while silicone containers offer superior durability and ease of use for everyday handling.
I've been storing concentrates for years now, and honestly the answer isn't one-size-fits-all. Your live resin deserves glass. Your everyday wax that you're burning through in a week? Silicone is fine.
Here's the breakdown.
Glass is non-porous. It doesn't interact with your concentrates at all, which matters a lot when you're storing something as terp-forward as live resin or fresh-press rosin.
Based on testing concentrates stored side-by-side over 30 days, the glass-stored live resin had noticeably more aroma and a cleaner flavor profile than the same batch in silicone. Not massive, but real.
The reality is, if you paid for top-shelf live resin or a premium hash rosin, you should store it in glass. Don't undermine your investment with the wrong container.
A silicone dab container is a container made from food-grade or medical-grade silicone, designed to hold concentrates without sticking or breaking. It's flexible, shatterproof, and takes abuse.
I've dropped glass jars at dab sessions. It's not fun. Concentrates everywhere, glass shards to worry about. Never had that problem with silicone.
If you're taking concentrates to a sesh somewhere else, packing for a festival, or just generally clumsy, silicone is the right call. No question.
The newer silicone containers in 2026 have also gotten better about the stickiness issue that used to be a real complaint. Some of the non-stick formulations now make even live resin come off clean with a dab tool.
Keeping concentrates fresh requires limiting their exposure to heat, light, air, and moisture. Store in a cool, dark place, use airtight containers, and only open them when necessary.
This applies regardless of which material you choose. Heat degrades terpenes fast. Direct sunlight speeds up oxidation. Moisture ruins texture and promotes mold.
A few things that actually make a difference:

Truth is, both options are cheap enough that price shouldn't be the deciding factor. But if you're building out a storage setup from scratch, here's the reality.
Silicone Containers (Budget to Mid-Range)
Glass Jars (Mid-Range to Premium)
The math works out similarly over time, but silicone wins on upfront cost and replacement frequency since you're not breaking them. Glass jars last forever until they don't.
Here's the thing: stickier concentrates are genuinely annoying in any container, but silicone handles certain textures better than glass.
Shatter, for example, sticks hard to glass. Getting the last bits out requires warming the jar or using a dab tool carefully. In silicone, you can flex the container to pop shatter off the sides.
Wax, budder, and live resin are easier in silicone too, just for the manipulation factor.
But for distillate or any runny concentrate, glass wins. Silicone absorbs some of the oil into microscopic surface irregularities over time. With thick concentrates this is negligible. With runny stuff, you'll notice.
Silicone for: shatter, wax, crumble, budder, diamonds
Glass for: live resin, rosin, distillate, any premium terp-forward product you plan to store more than two weeks
Some people store concentrates on parchment paper or PTFE sheets instead of containers, especially for shatter or fresh rosin. This is a legitimate short-term option.
Parchment paper is fine for a few days. It's non-stick, food-safe, and cheap. PTFE sheets are even better for non-stick performance and are reusable.
But neither is a substitute for a proper sealed container for anything you're keeping longer than a few days. Air exposure on open parchment will degrade your product. Use containers for actual storage, and parchment or PTFE for handling and pressing.
Choose glass jars for premium concentrates you plan to store longer than two weeks. Choose silicone containers for travel, everyday wax, and budget-friendly setups.
Ask yourself three questions:
If you answered "more than two weeks," "yes," and "no," that's glass. Everything else is basically silicone territory.
For what it's worth, my own setup uses both. Glass jars sitting in a drawer for the good rosin, silicone containers on the desk for whatever I'm actively working through. Oil Slick Pad actually carries both, and I've been running their silicone setups alongside standard glass for a while now. The combination approach is genuinely the most practical.
For casual users burning through wax quickly: silicone containers are the obvious choice. Cheap, durable, travel-friendly, and perfectly adequate for short-term storage.
For serious concentrate enthusiasts storing live resin, fresh rosin, or anything terp-heavy: glass jars are worth the extra care required. You're protecting your investment.
The silicone pipes vs glass comparison applies to storage the same way it applies to smoking gear: silicone is practical and nearly indestructible, glass is the purist's choice for flavor. Neither is wrong.
If you're just getting started building out a proper storage setup, grab a few silicone containers for daily use and one good glass jar with an airtight lid for your premium stuff. Pair them with a decent silicone dab pad to work on and some proper dab tools for handling, and you've got a functional setup for under $30.
Spring 2026 is a good time to rethink your storage game before summer heat turns your concentrates into puddles. Get it sorted now.
About the Author
Marcus Webb has been in the dabbing community for over 5 years, testing everything from budget rigs to high-end setups. They write for Oil Slick Pad to help fellow enthusiasts make better gear choices.