~6 minGlasswareBuying GuideCocktail

Best Highball / Collins Glasses (Everyday Picks + What to Look For)

Updated: February 24, 2026

The right highball glass makes Mojitos, Gin & Tonics, and any tall drink feel “bar quality.” Here’s how to buy a set you’ll actually use.

Fun fact
For most home drinks, stability beats “fancy”: a slightly thicker rim and a heavier base means fewer chips and fewer spills.

Quick answer: what to look for

  • Size: 10–14 oz covers most tall drinks (Collins is usually a bit taller).
  • Base weight: heavier base = more stable on crowded tables.
  • Rim: slightly thicker rim chips less (thin is pretty but fragile).
  • Shape: straight-sided is easiest for ice + stirring; tapered can look nicer but holds slightly less.
  • Dishwasher-safe if you want to use them weekly.

Top picks (Amazon)

Availability changes a lot by region, so these are “buy the right style fast” searches. Pick a set that matches your priorities (durability vs elegance).

Highball vs Collins (which should you buy?)

  • Highball: usually a bit shorter; great for Gin & Tonics, Whiskey Highballs, Vodka Soda.
  • Collins: taller; better for crushed ice and drinks with more soda/volume (Mojito, Tom Collins).
  • If you only buy one: pick a 12–14 oz “tall tumbler” and call it a day.

Sizing cheat sheet (so your drinks fit)

  • 10–12 oz: perfect for standard 2 oz spirit + mixer tall drinks.
  • 12–14 oz: best all-around (more ice + more soda).
  • 16 oz+: can make drinks look weak unless you scale recipes up.

Shop tools used (Amazon)

Highball glasses are the “money” item, but these are the easy upgrades that make tall drinks taste cleaner and look better.

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