$ 29.99
RAW Original Tips are filter tips made from unrefined paper fibers, designed for hand-rolled joints and cones. Built for smokers who care about what goes into their rolls, these tips hold their shape without falling apart when they get wet, and they roll up smooth thanks to proper grain orientation. Each pack holds 50 tips, and each box contains 50 packs — so you're stocked for a while.
RAW Original Tips work for anyone rolling joints or cones by hand. If you're rolling 2-3 times a day, buying by the box keeps you from running out every week. They're also solid for people who tend to hold joints near the end and want a tip that doesn't collapse or get soggy after a few passes.
Tear off a single tip from the perforated sheet. Roll it into a cylinder or accordion fold it (the M-shape or W-shape method) for extra filtration and airflow. Insert the rolled tip into your paper before you finish rolling, or slide it into a pre-rolled cone. The unrefined paper fibers give it enough grip to stay in place without tape or extra effort.
Because the paper is cut with the grain, it naturally wants to curl into a cylinder shape rather than square off. If you've used cheaper tips that flatten or kink when you try to roll them, you'll notice the difference immediately. These stay round and firm, even after they've been sitting in your hand or pocket for a bit.
When the joint gets to the last quarter-inch, the tip holds up without collapsing into a soggy mess. You can smoke it down to the filter without burning your fingers or dealing with a mouthful of loose paper fibers.
| Material | Unrefined long-fiber paper |
|---|---|
| Quantity Per Pack | 50 tips |
| Quantity Per Box | 50 packs (2,500 tips total) |
| Manufacturing | Fourdrinier paper machine |
| Compatibility | All rolling papers and cones |
Most filter tips are made from short-fiber paper or bleached material that loses structure when it gets damp. RAW uses long unrefined fibers processed on a traditional Fourdrinier machine, which creates a more durable sheet with better wet strength. The grain orientation matters too — cutting the paper parallel to the grain instead of across it means the fibers align with the direction you're rolling, so they curl naturally instead of resisting or buckling.
The result: a tip that stays cylindrical from the first puff to the last, without squaring off or collapsing when saliva or moisture hits it. If you've ever had a tip turn into a flat paddle halfway through a joint, that's usually because the paper was cut against the grain or made from cheap short fibers that break down fast.
Yes. RAW Original Tips work with any size rolling paper — king size, 1¼, single wide, whatever you're using. They also fit inside pre-rolled cones if you want to add extra filtration or structure.
These are similar in concept but use unrefined paper fibers instead of bleached cardboard. They're thinner and more flexible than cardboard tips, so they roll tighter and take up less space in your joint. The tradeoff: slightly less rigidity when completely dry, but better wet strength once moisture hits.
No. RAW tips are unflavored and unbleached, so they don't add any taste or chemical aftertaste. You're tasting your flower, not the filter.
Technically yes, but it's not recommended. Once a tip has been smoked through, it's absorbed resin and tar. Reusing it means you're pulling that residue into your next joint. Tips are cheap enough that single-use makes more sense for flavor and cleanliness.
If you're rolling 2-3 joints a day, a single 50-pack will last about 2-3 weeks. The box of 50 packs (2,500 tips total) covers roughly 2-3 years of daily rolling, or a few months if you're sharing with roommates or rolling for a group regularly.
Not if they're rolled properly. The long fibers maintain their shape even when wet, so you can smoke down to the filter without the tip flattening or collapsing into your mouth. If you're used to cheap tips that turn to mush, these hold up noticeably better.
Nope. These tips work with any rolling papers or cones. They're a good match for RAW papers because the materials are similar (unrefined, minimal processing), but they're not brand-locked. Use whatever papers you prefer.