
PAX Flow Mouthpiece Raised
Vape accessories
by PAX
PAX Flow Raised Mouthpiece — The Spare You'll Wish You'd Bought Sooner
The PAX Flow raised mouthpiece is a heat-resistant replacement part that sits a few millimetres above the device body, creating a more comfortable draw with less lip contact to heat buildup. It gives you a secure, tool-free fit on your PAX Flow vaporiser and costs next to nothing but saves you from that annoying moment when you can't find your original or it's caked in residue and you're stuck cleaning it mid-session.
Why a Raised PAX Flow Mouthpiece Makes a Difference
A raised mouthpiece adds roughly 3–4 mm of distance between your lips and the device body, reducing direct heat transfer during longer sessions. That matters more than you'd think — during extended use, heat can build up near the oven, and a raised mouthpiece keeps your mouth away from the warmest part of the vaporiser. The draw feels more natural too, closer to sipping from a straw than pressing your face against a warm slab of metal.
We've had customers come in after losing their original mouthpiece down the side of a sofa, in a festival field, or — our personal favourite — inside a hoover. Having a spare sitting in a drawer means you're never stuck. It's the PAX Flow equivalent of keeping a spare set of keys by the front door. If you're already thinking about it, just order one now and thank yourself later.
| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product | PAX Flow Raised Mouthpiece |
| Colour | Onyx |
| SKU | VS0446 |
| Compatibility | PAX Flow vaporiser |
| Material | Heat-resistant polymer |
| Installation | Tool-free, press-fit |
| Profile | Raised (sits above device body) |
| Maintenance | Rinse with isopropyl alcohol, air dry |
| Feature | Raised Mouthpiece | Flat Mouthpiece |
|---|---|---|
| Profile height | ~3–4 mm above device body | Flush with device body |
| Lip comfort | More natural, straw-like draw | Lower profile, less protrusion |
| Heat distance | Greater distance from oven | Closer to device surface |
| Pocket-friendliness | Slightly less slim | Sleeker, catches less on fabric |
| Cleaning grip | Easier to pull off for cleaning | Slightly harder to grip |
| Best for | Home sessions, longer draws | On-the-go portability |
Complete your setup: if you're grabbing a spare mouthpiece, it's worth picking up the PAX Flow Maintenance Kit at the same time. Screens and pipe cleaners wear out faster than mouthpieces, and having both on hand means you can do a full refresh in under five minutes. The PAX Flow Multi-Tool is also handy for packing and stirring the 0.3g chamber between draws. You can buy both alongside this mouthpiece to get everything sorted in one go.
Why You Actually Need a Spare PAX Flow Mouthpiece
Mouthpieces are the first component to accumulate residue on any portable vaporiser, making a spare essential for uninterrupted sessions. Lip oils, pocket lint, and vapour condensation all build up on the contact surface. You can clean it — and you should — but having a second mouthpiece means you can swap in a fresh one while the other soaks in isopropyl alcohol. No downtime, no excuses.
The other scenario we see constantly: travel. The PAX Flow's compact design (with its 0.3g chamber) makes it a go-to portable unit, but small parts have a way of disappearing when you're living out of a bag. A spare mouthpiece weighs practically nothing and takes up zero space. Chuck one in your kit and forget about it until you need it.
One honest limitation: this is specifically the raised version. If you prefer a flush, low-profile mouthpiece that sits completely flat against the device, this isn't the one — PAX makes a flat version separately. The raised mouthpiece does stick up a few millimetres, which some people find slightly less pocket-friendly. We'd pick the raised version for home sessions and the flat one for on-the-go, but plenty of people use the raised profile everywhere without complaint.
How to Install and Clean the PAX Flow Raised Mouthpiece
Installation takes under ten seconds: align the mouthpiece with the slot on top of a cool, powered-off PAX Flow and press down until it clicks. Here's the full process step by step:
- Make sure your PAX Flow is powered off and cool to the touch. Don't swap mouthpieces right after a session — give it a couple of minutes.
- Gently pull the existing mouthpiece straight up and away from the device. It's a press-fit, so no twisting or tools needed.
- Align the new raised mouthpiece with the slot on top of the PAX Flow and press it firmly down until it clicks into place. You'll feel it seat properly — there's a satisfying little snap.
- To clean, remove the mouthpiece and soak it in isopropyl alcohol (90% or higher works best) for 10–15 minutes. A cotton bud helps clear any residue from the airpath opening.
- Rinse with warm water, shake off the excess, and let it air dry completely before reattaching. Don't put a wet mouthpiece back on the device.










