A reclaim catcher is worth it if you dab often and hate cleaning, but it’s a waste of money if your rig already clogs easily or you never bother collecting reclaim. Pair one with a dab pad and your whole setup stays way less sticky, which is half the battle.
I’ve been using reclaim catchers on and off since 2026, mostly on quartz banger daily drivers, plus a couple terp slurper phases I’m not proud of. I’ve broken a few, flooded a few, and learned which ones are actually helpful.
A reclaim catcher is a glass attachment that sits between your banger and your rig. Its job is to catch the oils (reclaim) that would normally get pulled down your joint and into the rig’s water.
You end up with two wins.
First, your rig stays cleaner longer. Less brown gunk in the joint, less nasty smell, fewer “why is my bong water basically espresso?” moments.
Second, you can collect reclaim. Some people re-dab it, some use it for edibles, and some just like knowing they’re not donating good concentrate to the inside of their glass.
dab rig setup a reclaim catcher between banger and rig" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto; border-radius: 12px;" loading="lazy"> Here’s the reality, reclaim catchers don’t magically stop all mess. They mostly protect the joint and the upper chamber. If you take super hot dabs or you’re ripping a vaporizer-style pull on a tiny rig, you’ll still get some travel.
Dry vs water is the first big fork in the road. And people get weirdly tribal about it.
Dry catchers are basically a trap with a reservoir. No water inside the catcher.
They’re simple, they don’t splash, and they’re harder to mess up. If you’re buying your first catcher, I’d start dry 9 times out of 10.
What I like:
What bugs me:
Water catchers add a little water filtration before your rig. It’s like a tiny pre-cooler that also catches reclaim.
They can smooth out harsh hits, especially if you’re on a smaller dab rig or you’re using a hotter banger than you should be. But they also add drag, and they can be annoying to maintain.
What I like:
What bugs me:
Budget Dry Catcher ($20 to $35)
Midrange Dry Catcher ($35 to $60)
Water Catcher ($35 to $80)
Fitment is where most people mess up. And yes, I’ve ordered the wrong joint before and tried to “make it work.” It didn’t.
You need to match four things:
Most dab rigs are 14mm. Tiny rigs and some recyclers are 10mm. Big beakers and some heavier setups are 18mm.
How to check fast:
1. Look at your banger. Many are labeled on the invoice, but not on the glass.
2. Measure the joint opening with a ruler if you have to.
If you’re stuck between 14 and 18, it’s usually 14.
Most rigs have a female joint, and most bangers are male. A reclaim catcher typically needs to have a male end to go into the rig, and a female end to accept your banger.
So, for a common setup (female rig + male banger), you usually want:
But don’t trust “usually.” Check your exact gear.
Wrong angle means your banger sits tilted or sticks out awkwardly. That’s how you end up tapping a hot banger with your elbow mid-sesh. Ask me how I know.
Reclaim catchers add length and weight. On small glass, that can stress the joint.
If you run a heavy quartz banger, a big carb cap, and a chunky catcher, your joint is doing overtime.
If your rig is small or top-heavy, look for:
A reclaim catcher helps, but it doesn’t solve the “sticky tools everywhere” problem. A clean little dab station does.
This is where a dab pad earns its keep. It gives you a safe spot for a hot tool, a carb cap, and whatever dab tool you’re using, without gluing everything to your desk.
My basic station setup looks like this:
If you’re shopping around, Oil Slick Pad carries the kind of wax pad setups that actually sit flat and don’t collect dust in deep ridges. I’m picky about that. Deep grooves sound cool until you’re scraping reclaim flecks out of them.
And yeah, a silicone mat dabbing setup feels a little “extra” until you’ve knocked a jar onto carpet once. Then it feels like common sense.
If you want to nerd out more, these related reads pair well with a catcher:
Cleaning is where people either become reclaim-catcher believers… or throw the thing in a drawer forever.
Here’s my method after a few years of trial and error.
1. Let it cool fully. Don’t be brave.
2. Dump any liquid reclaim into a silicone jar if you collect it.
3. Rinse with hot water first (hot tap water is fine).
4. Add isopropyl alcohol (91% or 99%) and a pinch of coarse salt.
5. Cover the openings and shake gently.
6. Rinse thoroughly with warm water.
7. Air dry upside down.
If you want a legit safety reference for ISO handling, PubChem’s isopropyl alcohol page is a solid quick read: https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/Isopropyl-alcohol
If reclaim hardened into tar:
Truth is, some catcher designs have little traps and ledges that hold onto gunk forever. If yours is one of those, it’s not you. It’s the design.
If you want a deep dive on why borosilicate handles heat better than soda-lime glass, an authority source like Corning’s technical notes on lab glass is worth a look. It’s dry reading, but it explains a lot.
Worth it, if you’re any of these people:
Not worth it, if you’re any of these people:
My honest take in 2026: reclaim catchers are more popular now because concentrates are stronger and people are taking bigger, faster pulls. That combo sends more oil down the neck. A catcher helps. Simple.
But some rigs and bangers already have good reclaim control, especially if you dab lower temp and don’t inhale like you’re trying to clear a bong in one breath.
If you say yes to two or more, grab a catcher:
If you say yes to these, skip it or go minimalist:
If you try one and hate it, you didn’t fail. Some setups just don’t vibe with the extra glass. But if you’re a daily dabber with a favorite rig, a catcher is one of the few add-ons that can actually make dabbing feel easier instead of fussier.