5 Popular Types of Cocktail Glasses You Should Know About

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A well-stocked home bar is a mark of sophistication and sign of good hospitality. It feels so satisfying to be able to offer my guests a refreshing cocktail (with alcohol or not) when they stop by for a visit, so I always like to make sure I have a few spirits and mixers on-hand for just such an occasion.

5 Types of Cocktail Glasses

cognac cocktail close up with a lemon slice in it
Credit: Brittany Conerly Credit: Brittany Conerly

Rocks

Also known as an Old-Fashioned glass, the rocks glass is meant for drinks that are mixed and served in the same glass. A typical rocks glass holds 6 to 8 ounces of liquid. Usually, but not always, cocktails served in a rocks glass are served with ice, or “on the rocks.”

The best-known cocktail for rocks glasses is, as its other name implies, the Old-Fashioned. Other rocks glass cocktails include the Sazerac and Negroni. A bodega glass — a stout, wide-mouth glass with straight sides — is similar to a rocks glass and may be used interchangeably.

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Credit: Photo: Joe Lingeman; Food Styling: Jesse Szewczyk Credit: Photo: Joe Lingeman; Food Styling: Jesse Szewczyk

Highball

If you’ve got a cocktail that’s fizzy and refreshing, served over ice with a straw, you’ll need a highball glass, which can hold anywhere from 8 to 12 ounces of liquid. Often, highball glasses are used interchangeably with Collins glasses, which are a bit bigger.

Most of the x-and-y cocktails — like gin and tonic, scotch and soda, rum and coke, etc. — will be served in a highball, as well as a Gin Fizz and a Bloody Mary.

espresso martinis in glasses with one being poured
Credit: Photo: Joe Lingeman; Food Styling: Jesse Szewczyk Credit: Photo: Joe Lingeman; Food Styling: Jesse Szewczyk

Martini

The quintessential glass for mixed drinks, a martini glass, which also goes by the name of cocktail glass, is meant for drinks that are shaken or stirred but served without ice. By elevating the cup above the stem of the glass, the beverage stays colder longer.

In addition to the eponymous cocktail most associated with the martini glass, you’ll also find Manhattans and Aviations served in a martini glass.

A photo of a bright red cosmopolitan cocktail with a lemon wedge on the side of the cocktail glass.
Credit: Maria Do Credit: Maria Do

Coupe

A cousin to the more angular martini glass, coupes were originally intended for Champagne, but they are actually much better suited to cocktails.

Any cocktail served in a martini glass, including Daiquiris and Brooklyns, would be right at home in a coupe. A smaller, slightly more bell-shaped version of a coupe is known as the Nick and Nora glass.

a painkiller cocktail with fruit on marble with a blue marble background
Credit: Photo: Lucy Schaeffer; Food Styling: Nicole Rufus Credit: Photo: Lucy Schaeffer; Food Styling: Nicole Rufus

Hurricane

A big cocktail glass (around 20 ounces) with a bell shape, hurricane glasses are the go-to vessels for fun and fruity cocktails including the eponymous Hurricane for which they were designed, as well as the Singapore Sling and the Pi?a Colada.