Glassware 101: Which Cocktail Glass for Which Drink

The glass you pour into changes how a cocktail tastes. Seven shapes every home bar needs, what each is for, and how to build a starter collection for under $100.

Seven empty cocktail glass shapes arranged on a dark bar counter.
The seven shapes. Own these and you have 95% of cocktails covered.

The glass matters more than you think. Same cocktail in a coupe vs a rocks glass drinks differently because the shape changes your nose-to-lip distance, how fast the drink warms, and how the aromatic oils reach your face. Here are the seven shapes worth owning, what each is for, and how to buy them without going broke.

The seven essential shapes

1. Coupe

The wide, shallow, stemmed glass. Capacity around 5 to 7 oz. The classic bar glass for stirred spirit-forward cocktails and shaken drinks served “up” (without ice).

Use for: Martinis, Filthy Martinis, Manhattans, Daiquiris, Sidecars, Whiskey Sours, Espresso Martinis.

A good coupe makes a cocktail look finished. It is the one glass you should own more of than any other. 4 to 6 coupes is a sensible home starter.

A classic coupe glass with a crystal-clear Martini and a lemon twist, on a dark bar counter.
Coupe. The all-rounder for anything served up.

2. Martini Glass (V-shape)

The iconic conical glass on a long stem. Capacity 5 to 8 oz. Divisive among bartenders: looks classic, spills easily, concentrates aroma at the nose.

Use for: Martinis (if you want tradition over the coupe), Cosmopolitans, Appletinis.

Honestly, the coupe does the same job with less splashing. Most bars have switched to coupes for this reason.

A V-shape Martini glass with a pink Cosmopolitan on a dark bar counter.
Martini V. The icon. Looks sharp, spills easily.

3. Rocks / Old Fashioned / Lowball

Short, heavy, flat-bottomed. Capacity 6 to 10 oz (single rocks) or 12 to 14 oz (double rocks). Built for drinks served over ice, especially spirit-forward cocktails where you want to nose the drink as you sip.

Use for: Old Fashioneds, Negronis on rocks, Boulevardiers, Whiskey Neat with a rock, Caipirinhas, Mezcal Old Fashioneds.

Buy the heaviest ones you can afford. The weight is 90% of the feel.

A heavy rocks glass with an Old Fashioned, a large clear ice cube, and an expressed orange peel.
Rocks. Heavy, short, built for sipping.

4. Highball / Collins

Tall, straight-sided. 10 to 16 oz. For long drinks built over ice with a mixer top-up.

Use for: Gin and Tonic, Moscow Mule, Cuba Libre, Mojito (long), Dark ‘n’ Stormy, Tom Collins, Vodka Soda, Paloma.

A tall highball glass with a Gin and Tonic, ice cubes, and a lime wedge.
Highball. The long-drink glass. Built for bubbles.

5. Hurricane

Curvy, bulbous, tall. 16 to 20 oz. Designed for tropical blended and frozen drinks that need space for ice, rum, and a small garden on top.

Use for: Hurricane (the namesake), Pina Colada, Frozen Margarita, Miami Vice, most tiki drinks.

A curvy hurricane glass with a tropical Pina Colada, pineapple wedge garnish.
Hurricane. Tiki-adjacent, built for volume.

6. Shot Glass

Small, usually 1 to 2 oz capacity. Straight-sided or tapered. For shots, neat. The thin-sided slim ones show layered colours best.

Use for: Lightsaber Shot, B-52, layered shots, tequila shots, whiskey shots.

A slim shot glass with a B-52 layered shot showing three distinct colour bands.
Shot. Slim and tall is best for layered shots.

7. Margarita Glass

Wide bowl on a curved stem. 8 to 14 oz. Half-way between a coupe and a hurricane. Technically optional (a coupe works for shaken Margaritas) but looks genuinely fantastic for a Classic Margarita or a Frozen one.

Use for: Spicy Margarita, Frozen Margarita, any Margarita variant, Paloma.

A classic margarita glass with a salt-rimmed Margarita and a lime wheel.
Margarita. Optional, but the Margarita look is the Margarita look.

A $100 starter home bar

This gets you covered for 95% of cocktails:

  • 4 coupes, $30 (IKEA Stockholm or Libbey Signature)
  • 4 double rocks, $25 (Libbey heavy bottom or IKEA)
  • 4 highballs, $20
  • 6 shot glasses, $10
  • 2 margarita glasses, $15

Total: ~$100 for a dinner party of four, covered for any cocktail you are likely to make.

Three glass rules that change your cocktails

Chill your glassware

A cold glass keeps the drink cold for twice as long. Keep your coupes and rocks glasses in the freezer permanently. Five minutes before you pour is enough.

Match the glass to the volume

A 7 oz coupe holding a 3 oz Martini looks right. The same Martini in a 10 oz coupe looks sad and under-poured. Volume mismatch is the biggest home-bar tell.

Buy thin-rimmed glasses for “up” cocktails

The thinner the rim, the less you notice the glass, the more you taste the drink. Libbey Signature Greenwich or Schott Zwiesel coupes are the cost-reasonable upgrade.

Glasses that aren’t worth owning

  • Champagne flutes. Use a coupe instead.
  • Fancy pewter Moscow Mule mugs. Minimal effect on temperature. Use a highball.
  • Novelty tiki mugs. One or two is fine; a shelf of them is clutter.
  • Stemless martini glasses. The stem exists for a reason.