The future of dabbing is electric rigs with rock solid temperature control, smart surfaces that protect your glass, and concentrate tools that actually make hits cleaner instead of more complicated. A good dab pad or mat is going to feel less like a coaster and more like the control panel for your whole setup.
That sounds dramatic, but the shift is already here. If you have been dabbling in Puffcos, Carta rigs, or silicone dab mats lately, you have seen the first wave of this next phase.
Look, the core ritual is not going anywhere. Heat surface, vaporize concentrate, inhale, smile. That basic loop has worked since titanium nails and blowtorches.
What is changing is everything around that loop.
We are moving toward:
The big shift is from "manual but powerful" to "automated but dialed in". Torches and quartz are still elite if you know what you are doing. But the average person can get a better, more consistent hit from a well designed electric rig in 2024 than from a random torch and cheap banger.
And honestly, consistency matters more than chasing a theoretical perfect dab you hit once a month.
I have been dabbing since around 2012. I have gone through the whole callback reel.
Titanium nails. Dry dab rigs. Crusty domes. Reclaim everywhere. Then quartz. Then e-nails that needed a whole power station.
Electric dab rigs in 2024 and 2025 are finally at the point where they feel less like gadgets and more like daily drivers.
Most people care about three things:
Electric rigs hit those boxes because they:
You do not need to stare at a torch flame, count Mississippi, or thermally shock your banger. You pick a preset, wait a moment, and hit.
Real talk, electric rigs are not perfect.
And if you love huge, wide open draws through a tall glass dab rig, most electric rigs still feel a little restricted. More like a tight vaporizer than a big rig.
You also pay for convenience. A decent electric rig in 2024 is usually 200 to 400 dollars. A solid traditional glass rig, banger, torch, and carb cap can land in the same range, but the glass often lasts longer if you do not drop it.
This is the part I am most excited about, and not just because I write for Oil Slick Pad and live in silicone land most days.
Right now, most people think of a dab pad as a simple silicone mat that keeps their table sticky-free. That is step one, sure. But the next couple of years are going to make your pad feel more like a dab station than just a landing strip.
The classic oil slick pad style silicone mat already solves a big problem. It catches drips, cushions glass, and lets your tools rest without grabbing every bit of hair and dust on your desk.
But you can already see upgrades happening:
Next step is obvious. Add brains.
Picture this.
You set your electric rig down on a smart silicone dab mat. Little sensors in the pad read the base temperature and send that data to an app. The app tweaks your rig’s power curve so you never char your rosin. Your dab pad just became a feedback loop instead of a placemat.
We are not fully there yet in 2024, but some brands are already playing with:
That is where dab pads start to feel like actual equipment instead of simple cannabis accessories.
Buzzwords aside, a good modern concentrate pad should do at least three things right now:
1. Protect your glass and table
2. Keep tools and jars organized
3. Be stupid easy to clean
If a "smart" feature gets in the way of those three, skip it. I would rather use a simple, high quality silicone dab mat than a glitchy smart pad that freaks out every time I spill a gram of live resin on it.
There is a lot of hype gear floating around right now. Some of it is incredible. Some of it is basically a light show attached to a mediocre atomizer.
Here is a grounded way to look at upgrades.
If you have a limited budget, spend on the part that actually vaporizes your concentrate.
Budget Option (under 120 dollars)
Midrange Option (150 to 250 dollars)
Premium Option (300 to 450 dollars)
If you already have a rig you love, an e-nail can be a killer upgrade. If you hate clutter and cables, a single all-in-one electric rig might be cleaner.
This is where products like oil slick pad style mats and full dab trays shine.
Simple Setup (20 to 40 dollars)
Dialed In Station (40 to 80 dollars)
Pro Station (80 to 150 dollars)
If you find yourself knocking over cotton swab jars or losing carb caps under the couch, a proper dab station is not a luxury. It just saves your sanity.
Do you need an app to dab? No.
Can a good app help? Sometimes.
The most useful "smart" features right now are:
The least useful features are:
We used to live in separate worlds.
Bong people over here. Dab rig folks over there. Vape people clutching their pocket pens in the corner.
2024 has blurred that line.
There are adapters that let you plug a vaporizer into a glass rig. Electric dab rigs shaped like mini bongs. Hybrid devices that run both flower and concentrate in the same base.
Here is how I think about it.
You can mix and match, but your experience is better if each piece has a primary job. You do not want your flower bowl constantly full of reclaimed wax. Or your nice quartz banger choked with flower ash.
Let’s talk strategy, not just shiny toys.
These are upgrades that make sense immediately for most dabbers.
These are low regret purchases. They improve every session, even if the rest of your setup changes.
These are areas where the tech is changing fast in 2024 and 2025.
If a new feature solves a real problem you have right now, like needing precise temp control for medical use, go for it. If it just looks cool on Instagram, maybe sleep on it for a month.
Truth is, the future of dabbing is not about replacing everything you love. It is about removing the annoying parts you have put up with for years.
I do not think torches or classic rigs are going away. I still pull out a simple glass rig and quartz banger on some nights. There is a ritual to it that electric rigs cannot fully replace.
But the center of gravity is shifting toward smart, organized setups. Where your dab pad, rig, tools, and concentrates all feel like they belong to the same system instead of a random pile.
If you are upgrading in 2024, start with the basics. A sturdy silicone surface, like an oil slick pad style mat that fits your main sesh area. A heat source you trust, whether that is a torch or a midrange electric rig. A small dab station that keeps your tools where you can actually find them.
Then add tech slowly. Watch how the market shakes out. Read real user reviews, not just influencer hype. Check lab testing and material safety information, especially for anything that heats near your face.
The future of dabbing is going to be smarter, cleaner, and frankly a lot more forgiving than the torch-and-titanium era. Your lungs, your glass, and your coffee table will all be better for it.
And your dab pad will not just catch drips. It will quietly run the show from under your rig.