Accessories in NYC
Cannabis accessories are the tools you use to prep, consume, and store flower and extracts: grinders, rolling papers, pipes, bongs, dab tools, 510 batteries, and storage jars. At Rezidue, a licensed dispensary at 723 11th Ave in Hell's Kitchen, you can shop them in-store or by same-day Manhattan delivery.
- Where to buy
- Rezidue, 723 11th Ave, Hell's Kitchen, Manhattan (in-store or same-day delivery)
- Age requirement
- 21+ with valid government-issued photo ID, including for accessory-only orders
- Common categories
- Grinders, rolling papers and cones, pipes, bongs, dab tools, 510 batteries, storage
- Payment
- Cash and debit accepted, with an ATM on-site
What counts as a cannabis accessory?
A cannabis accessory is any non-consumable tool that helps you prepare, consume, or store cannabis. Think grinders, rolling papers, cones, pipes, bongs, dab tools, 510-thread batteries, lighters, rolling trays, and airtight jars. They contain no THC themselves, so they support the flower, vapes, and concentrates you already buy.
Walk up to the counter at Rezidue and the accessory wall is the gear that makes everything else work. None of it gets you high on its own. A grinder breaks down flower for an even burn, papers and cones hold it, and a pipe or bong is how the smoke gets to you.
The category splits into a few buckets: prep tools (grinders, rolling trays), consumption hardware (pipes, bongs, papers, dab rigs), vape hardware (510 batteries, chargers), and storage (jars, smell-proof bags, humidity packs).
Because accessories are not cannabis products, the THC purchase limits do not apply to them. You still need to be 21-plus with valid ID to buy anything inside a licensed New York dispensary, accessories included.
How do I choose the right grinder, papers, or pipe?
Match the tool to how you actually consume. If you roll, prioritize papers, cones, and a grinder. If you prefer pipes or bongs, choose by material and size. For carts, you need a 510 battery. A budtender at Rezidue can match gear to your flower and routine in a minute.
Grinders come in two-piece, three-piece, and four-piece builds. A four-piece adds a kief catch under a screen, so the powdery trichomes that fall off get collected for later. Metal grinders bite through dense flower better than plastic.
For rolling, papers come in rice, hemp, and wood pulp. Rice burns slow and thin, hemp is forgiving for beginners, and pre-rolled cones skip the rolling skill entirely. If hand-rolling is not your thing, our pre-rolls come ready to go.
Pipes and bongs trade portability for smoothness. Glass spoon pipes are pocketable; water pipes cool and filter the smoke. For vape carts, confirm the cartridge is 510-thread, then pair it with a variable-voltage battery so you control the heat.
Quick picks by routine
Flower roller: four-piece grinder, rolling papers or cones, a rolling tray, and a lighter.
Pipe or bong user: a glass spoon pipe or a compact water pipe, plus pipe cleaners and screens.
Cart user: a 510-thread battery with adjustable voltage and a USB charger.
Concentrate user: a dab tool, a quartz banger or e-rig, and a heat-resistant silicone container.
Do I need to be 21 to buy accessories in NYC?
Yes. New York's licensed adult-use dispensaries are 21-plus only, and that age check applies to the whole store, accessories included. Bring a valid government-issued photo ID. Rezidue verifies age at the door for in-store visits and at handoff for every delivery order.
Under the Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act (MRTA), only licensed Office of Cannabis Management retailers may sell adult-use cannabis in New York. The 21-plus requirement governs entry to those licensed stores, so even an accessory-only order goes through the same ID check.
For delivery, the driver checks your ID against the order name at the door. The buyer must be 21-plus and present; we cannot leave cannabis products or paired accessory orders unattended.
If you want to confirm a shop is legitimate before buying, check the OCM licensed-retailer list at cannabis.ny.gov. Rezidue holds OCM license OCM-CAURD-25-000303.
How do I keep my flower fresh? Storage accessories explained
Cannabis stays fresher in an airtight, opaque container kept cool and out of direct light. Glass jars with a tight seal beat plastic baggies, and a two-way humidity pack holds moisture in a stable range. Proper storage protects aroma, terpenes, and a smooth burn over time.
Light, heat, and air are what degrade flower. UV light breaks down cannabinoids and terpenes, so an opaque or amber jar stored in a cool drawer outlasts a clear bag on a windowsill.
Two-way humidity packs, like the ones we carry, release or absorb moisture to hold flower in a steady range. Too dry and it gets harsh; too wet and it risks mold. The pack does the balancing for you.
Keep jars away from the stove, radiator, or a sunny sill. If you are stocking up, ask about smell-proof storage. To learn more about aroma and the compounds behind it, see our terpenes guide.
How do I clean and care for my pipes and bongs?
Resin builds up fast and tastes harsh, so clean glass regularly. Most people use isopropyl alcohol and coarse salt as an abrasive, shaken inside the piece, then rinsed thoroughly with warm water. Pipe cleaners, cotton swabs, and replacement screens keep airflow open between deep cleans.
For glass spoon pipes and bongs, a soak in isopropyl alcohol with coarse salt loosens resin. Cap the openings, shake, and let the salt scrub the inside. Rinse well with warm water and let it dry before the next session.
Swap screens when they clog and run a pipe cleaner through the stem to keep the draw smooth. A clean piece tastes cleaner and pulls easier, which matters more than people expect.
For dab gear, wipe the banger while it is still warm, not hot, with a cotton swab. We stock cleaning supplies and replacement parts so a small accessory does not sideline your whole setup.
Can I get accessories delivered same-day in Manhattan?
Yes. Rezidue offers same-day delivery to most of Manhattan, and accessories can ride along with your flower, vape, or edible order. Add a grinder, papers, a battery, or a storage jar to your cart, and a verified driver brings it to your door for a 21-plus ID check.
Order from rezidueny.com/shop, build your cart with products and accessories together, and choose delivery. We run same-day delivery across Manhattan from our Hell's Kitchen counter, covering nearby areas like Midtown West, Hudson Yards, the Theater District, and the Upper West Side.
Prefer to grab gear in person? We are at 723 11th Ave between West 50th and West 51st, a short walk from the A, C, and E at 50th Street and the 1 at 50th Street, with the N, Q, R, W and 7 reachable at Times Square. Hours are Monday through Saturday noon to 10pm and Sunday 1pm to 9pm.
For first-timers pairing accessories with a flower or cart purchase, our budtenders can build a starter kit on the spot and explain how each piece works.
New York's 21-plus rule applies to the whole licensed store
The New York Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) administers the state's adult-use program under the Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act (MRTA), signed in 2021. OCM rules limit adult-use cannabis sales to licensed dispensaries and restrict those stores to adults 21 and older, who must show valid government-issued photo identification. That age requirement governs entry to the licensed premises, which is why dispensaries verify ID even for customers buying only accessories like grinders, papers, or batteries. OCM also maintains the official list of licensed retailers, published at cannabis.ny.gov, so shoppers can confirm a store is operating legally before purchasing anything. Rezidue operates under OCM license OCM-CAURD-25-000303 at 723 11th Avenue in Hell's Kitchen, Manhattan, and applies the 21-plus ID check both in-store and at delivery handoff.
Purchase limits cover cannabis, not the tools you use
Under guidance from the New York Office of Cannabis Management, adults 21 and older may purchase up to 3 ounces of cannabis flower or up to 24 grams of concentrate per day at a licensed dispensary, with the same figures applying as public possession limits. These limits attach to cannabis products themselves. Accessories such as grinders, rolling papers, pipes, water pipes, dab tools, 510-thread batteries, and storage jars contain no THC and are not counted against the daily purchase cap. New Yorkers may also store up to 5 pounds of cannabis at home. Understanding the distinction helps shoppers plan a visit: you can add as much hardware as you like to an order without affecting how much flower or concentrate you are allowed to buy that day under New York law.
NY Office of Cannabis Management (cannabis.ny.gov); MRTA 2021
Why storage matters: cannabinoids and terpenes degrade with light and heat
Cannabis owes its aroma and reported effects to compounds the plant produces, including cannabinoids such as THC and CBD and aromatic terpenes like myrcene and limonene. According to general science summarized by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), part of the National Institutes of Health, THC is the primary intoxicating compound in cannabis. These plant compounds are sensitive to environmental conditions; exposure to light, heat, and air over time can alter a product's chemical profile. That is the practical reason storage accessories exist. Airtight, opaque containers limit light and oxygen contact, and humidity-control packs help keep flower from drying out or absorbing excess moisture. None of this is a medical claim; it is simply preservation. Many people choose proper storage to protect the flavor, smell, and even burn of what they purchased at a licensed dispensary.
Vape hardware and the 510-thread standard
Many cannabis vape cartridges sold at licensed New York dispensaries use a common 510-thread connection, named for its threading specification, which lets a cartridge screw onto a compatible battery. This interoperability is why a 510 battery counts as an accessory rather than a finished vape: the cartridge holds the cannabis oil, while the battery simply heats it. Variable-voltage batteries let users adjust temperature, which can change vapor density and flavor. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not approved cannabis or THC vaping products as safe or effective for any medical use, and reminds the public that inhalable products carry inherent risks. At Rezidue, budtenders confirm cartridge compatibility, explain charging, and pair carts with the right battery so customers leave with hardware that works together rather than a mismatched setup.
Buying accessories from a licensed source
The New York Office of Cannabis Management stresses that only licensed retailers are authorized to sell adult-use cannabis, and it encourages consumers to verify licensure before purchasing. While unlicensed shops and smoke stores may sell pipes, grinders, and papers, buying accessories alongside cannabis products from a licensed dispensary means the entire transaction happens within New York's regulated system, with proper age verification and the consumer protections that come with it. Licensed dispensaries also carry products that have moved through New York's testing requirements, so the flower or extract you pair with your new gear is sourced through the legal supply chain. Rezidue, located at 723 11th Avenue in Hell's Kitchen near Times Square, Hudson Yards, and the Port Authority, accepts cash and debit, has an ATM on-site, and offers in-store shopping, online pickup, and same-day delivery across most of Manhattan.
What cannabis accessories does Rezidue sell in Hell's Kitchen?
Rezidue carries the everyday gear for flower, vapes, and concentrates: grinders, rolling papers and cones, glass pipes, water pipes, dab tools, 510-thread batteries, lighters, rolling trays, and storage jars. You can shop them in-store at 723 11th Ave or add them to a same-day Manhattan delivery order.
Do I need ID to buy a grinder or papers in New York?
Yes. New York's licensed adult-use dispensaries are 21-plus only, and the age check applies to the entire store. Bring a valid government-issued photo ID. The requirement holds whether you are buying flower or only an accessory like a grinder, papers, or a battery.
Do accessories count against New York's cannabis purchase limit?
No. New York's purchase limit of up to 3 ounces of flower or 24 grams of concentrate per day applies to cannabis products. Accessories contain no THC, so grinders, pipes, batteries, and storage jars do not count against that daily cap under OCM rules.
What is a 510 battery and do I need one?
A 510 battery is the rechargeable power source that screws onto a 510-thread vape cartridge to heat the oil. If you buy vape carts, you need a compatible battery. A variable-voltage model lets you adjust the temperature. Disposable vapes have the battery built in, so no separate one is needed.
How should I store cannabis to keep it fresh?
Use an airtight, opaque container kept cool and out of direct light, and add a two-way humidity pack to hold moisture steady. Light, heat, and air degrade aroma and terpenes over time. A sealed glass jar in a cool drawer outlasts a plastic bag on a sunny windowsill.
How do I clean a glass pipe or bong?
Most people soak the piece in isopropyl alcohol with coarse salt, cap the openings, and shake so the salt scrubs away resin, then rinse well with warm water and let it dry. Swap screens when they clog and run a pipe cleaner through the stem to keep airflow open.
Can I get accessories delivered same-day in Manhattan?
Yes. Rezidue offers same-day delivery to most of Manhattan, and accessories can be added to your flower, vape, or edible order. Build your cart at rezidueny.com/shop, choose delivery, and a verified driver brings it to your door for a 21-plus ID check.
What is the difference between a two-piece and four-piece grinder?
A two-piece grinder has a top and bottom that grind flower between teeth. A four-piece adds a screen and a bottom chamber that catches kief, the powdery trichomes that fall off. If you want to collect kief for later, choose a four-piece, usually metal for durability.
21+NY OCM Adult-Use Retail License OCM-CAURD-25-000303· Please consume responsibly.· Educational information only, not medical advice.
