$ 14.99
The Clear Plastic Oil Containers 100 Pack gives dispensaries, brands, and concentrate makers a straightforward bulk solution for packaging oils, distillates, and liquid extracts. These screw-top containers offer leak-resistant closure and full product visibility, making them ideal for sample portions, single-use fills, or retail-ready concentrate packaging where customers want to see what they're buying.
These containers fit operations that need affordable, functional packaging without premium pricing. Dispensaries using them for house-brand oils, extractors packaging samples for wholesale accounts, or brands testing new SKUs before committing to custom packaging all benefit from the bulk format. They're also solid for processors who need interim storage during production before final retail packaging.
Fill containers with your oil product using a syringe, dosing pump, or careful pour method depending on viscosity. Leave a small headspace at the top to allow for expansion and easy lid threading. Screw the cap on firmly until you feel resistance — overtightening plastic threads can strip them, so find the sweet spot where it's secure but not cranked down.
For oils that tend to stick or crystallize, a quick warm-up before filling makes dispensing easier and cleaner. Once filled, store containers upright in a cool, dark location. Label each container with strain, batch info, and fill date to maintain proper inventory tracking. For retail presentation, these stack neatly in display cases and the clear walls let product color and clarity do the selling.
Clean any external residue immediately after filling — oil that sits on the outside attracts dust and makes containers look handled. A quick wipe with a dry cloth keeps your packaged product looking professional.
| Quantity | 100 containers per pack |
|---|---|
| Material | Clear plastic |
| Closure type | Screw-on lid |
| Intended use | Oil, distillate, and liquid concentrate storage |
These work best with liquid to semi-viscous concentrates — distillates, oils, tinctures, and RSO-style products. For thicker concentrates like budder, badder, or crumble, consider silicone-lined concentrate jars that allow easier product removal. The screw-top design assumes room-temperature storage; extreme cold can make plastic brittle, and extreme heat can soften it or affect seal integrity.
Not designed as child-resistant packaging out of the box. If your market requires CR compliance for retail sale, you'll need to pair these with secondary CR packaging or use them strictly for B2B, wholesale samples, or internal production storage where CR isn't mandated.
The listing doesn't specify exact capacity in ml. Based on typical oil container formats in this category, expect these to be suited for small single-dose or sample-size portions. Contact the supplier for exact dimensions if you need specific fill volumes for your operation.
No, these are standard screw-top containers without child-resistant mechanisms. They're appropriate for B2B transfers, internal production use, or markets that don't require CR packaging. For retail in regulated markets, check your local compliance requirements — you may need CR outer packaging or different containers entirely.
They're designed for oils and liquids. Very thick concentrates like cold-cure badder or dry crumble won't dispense well from these and would be better suited to wide-mouth glass jars or silicone containers. If your oil is thick but still pourable when warmed, these will work fine.
Yes. The clear plastic surface accepts standard adhesive labels. For best adhesion, make sure the container surface is clean and dry before applying. Wraparound labels work well since the smooth walls don't have ridges or textures that interfere with sticking.
Keep them upright in a cool, dark location away from direct sunlight. UV exposure can degrade some oil products over time. Room temperature storage is ideal — avoid freezing temps that make plastic brittle or hot environments that could compromise seal integrity.
The listing doesn't specify the exact plastic grade. For operations with strict material certification requirements, request a spec sheet or certificate of analysis from the supplier before committing to large orders. For general concentrate packaging where food-grade isn't mandated, these perform the basic job reliably.
Technically yes, but for commercial operations it's not recommended. Residue from previous fills can contaminate new product, and repeated use wears down the threads. The bulk pricing makes single-use practical, and fresh containers maintain a professional appearance for retail.