Everything else is personal preference.
I have been dabbing for over a decade now, cycling through cheap gas station torches, Blazer Big Shots, induction heaters, e-rigs, and a few sketchy Amazon specials that probably took a week off my life. The torch and lighter market in 2025 is way better than it used to be, but there is still a ton of junk mixed in with the gems.
So let’s break it down like a friend would, not like a marketing brochure.
A good dab torch does three things well. It heats your banger or nail fast, it heats it evenly, and it does both without scaring you or your pets.
For most people using a standard quartz banger on a dab rig, you want a torch that can bring the banger to temp in about 20 to 40 seconds. That is usually a decent sweet spot between “takes forever” and “accidentally melted the side of my favorite glass piece.”
Most serious dabbers use jet torches, not soft flame lighters. Jet flames stay tight, directional, and hot enough to tackle thick quartz and large surface area bangers.
Key details to look for:
If the flame looks floppy, yellow, and inconsistent, skip it. I do not care how cool the colors or graphics are.
The best torch is the one you can hold comfortably at weird angles while slightly high.
Things that matter more than people expect:
If you have a compact rig on an oil slick pad or small silicone dab mat, a mid-size torch like the Blazer Firefox or Newport Zero mini is usually perfect. If you have a giant recycler or thick imported banger, the Blazer Big Shot or a similar “table torch” starts to make more sense.
Fuel seems boring, but it is the difference between clean flavor and “why does my rosin taste like camping stove.”
For 99 percent of dab setups, refined butane is the right move.
Butane for dabbing
Look for at least “triple refined” on the can. Common solid brands: Vector, Colibri, Newport, Whip-It. You will pay a few bucks more per can, but your terps will thank you.
Propane for dabbing
You can dab with propane, people do, especially with big camping-style torches. I just do not recommend it unless you really know your timing and you are fine with the extra heat and slightly harsher feel.
Here is how the current market shakes out.
Budget Torch Option ($15 to $30)
These are the classic Amazon or gas station torches. Some last months, some die in a week. Almost all of them cut corners on valves and seals.
Midrange Torch Option ($35 to $60)
This is where you find brands like Newport, Special Blue, and some Blazer-adjacent clones. Build quality is better, but still a mixed bag.
Premium Torch Option ($70 to $120)
This is Blazer Big Shot territory. Not cheap, but these torches can run for years with minimal issues if you treat them right.
Short answer. For some people, yes. For most dabbers, not completely.
And this is where definitions matter. When people say “e-lighter” in the dabbing world in 2025, they usually mean one of three things:
Induction heaters like the Ispire Wand basically act like a torch replacement for bangers with a metal insert, or for certain hybrid nails.
Pros:
Cons:
These are really appealing if you want a neat, semi-clinical dab station, especially on an oil slick pad with a dedicated dab tray and tool holder. You can set it, insert the banger, wait for the beep, and you are good.
Some people jump straight from cheap torches to full e-rigs like the Puffco Peak Pro, Carta 2, or DabX. Technically these are not torches or lighters, but they live in the same mental category.
A lot of daily dabbers now keep both. A torch rig for at-home “real” sessions, and an e-rig or e-lighter style device for late nights, couch dabs, or outdoor sessions.
These look cool as hell and work for joints, bongs, and pipes.
For dabs though, most of them are gimmicks. They do not have the raw output to heat quartz or titanium properly. So they are fine as part of your dabbing accessories kit, but not as your main banger heater.
You do not need fancy numbers or Bluetooth to control a torch. You need a reliable valve and a flame you can see and repeat.
For most quartz bangers:
If you are constantly chazzing bangers, you are probably overheating or focusing the flame on one spot. That is technically user error, not a torch problem.
I usually tell people: if you dab on a normal to slightly thick quartz banger, single or dual is perfect. If you love 30 mm buckets, thick opaque bottoms, or big slurpers, then the extra jets can be helpful.
Real talk: most torch injuries are user error mixed with bad design. Torches do not care about your fingers or your $300 glass dab rig.
At minimum, a 2025-worthy dab torch should have:
Some higher end models also have auto shutoff timers or overheat protection, which are genuinely helpful if you are forgetful or session often.
Torches eat oxygen and produce combustion byproducts. You will not die after a few dabs in a normal room, but you should still:
A silicone dab mat or oil slick pad is heat resistant, but not torch-tip hot. Give your torch tip at least 30 to 60 seconds before you lay it down on any surface.
Here is where it all gets personal. Your ideal torch or e-lighter depends on your rig, your space, and your rituals.
If your main kit is a small recycler or compact dab rig on a silicone dab mat or wax pad:
If you rock big, thick glass with 25 mm or 30 mm bangers:
For home dabbing:
For travel or seshing at a friend’s place:
A lot of torch problems come from bad filling and zero maintenance, not from “cheap products” like everyone on Reddit claims.
Here is the quick, simple method that actually works:
1. Turn the flame adjustment to the lowest setting and make sure the torch is completely off.
2. If the torch is older or acting weird, use a small tool to press the refill valve and bleed out old gas and air.
3. Hold the butane can upside down, press it firmly into the valve, and fill in short 3 to 5 second bursts.
4. Let the torch rest 5 to 10 minutes before lighting, so internal pressure and temperature stabilize.
If you skip step 4, you will sometimes get sputtering or weird flames. That is not a “defective torch,” that is just cold gas and pressure imbalance.
Every couple of weeks, especially if you use your torch daily:
If your torch starts misfiring frequently, try switching to higher quality butane and bleeding the tank fully before refilling. That fixes at least half the “broken torch” complaints I have seen over the years.
If you are the kind of person who forgets whether you turned off the stove, a premium torch with a clear, solid ignition and lock is not a luxury. It is just smart.
By this point, you probably know whether you are a butane-for-life person or someone leaning toward an e-lighter or induction heater. Both paths are valid. Both can get you clean, tasty dabs if you respect heat and pick quality gear.
If you love the ritual and flexibility, grab a solid midrange or premium butane torch, pair it with a quartz banger on a good glass rig, and keep everything anchored on a reliable oil slick pad or silicone dab mat. Treat your torch like real equipment, not a disposable lighter, and it will pay you back for years.
If you are more about consistency and convenience, an induction e-lighter style heater or a good e-rig can become your daily driver. You might still want a small torch around for backup or for those “old school” sessions.
Either way, the core idea of this dabbing guide is simple. Control the flame or heat, choose clean fuel or regulated power, and do not cheap out on safety. The rest is just you, your rig, and the kind of session you actually enjoy having.