
Digital scales
A weighing cup set is a simple accessory that turns a compact pocket scale into a proper weighing station. This set of 5 lightweight cups sits right on your scale platform and gives you a contained area for loose materials — herbs, gems, powders, medicines, or anything else that would otherwise roll straight off the edge. SKU: HS0138.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Quantity | 5 weighing cups per set |
| SKU | HS0138 |
| Suitable for | Loose herbs, gems, medicines, powders, small items |
| Compatibility | Most digital pocket and platform scales |
| Category | Digital scale accessories |
Complete your weighing setup — pair these cups with one of our digital pocket scales for accurate readings down to 0.01g. If you're measuring herbs for tea blends or botanical preparations, a precision scale and this cup set is all you need.
Here's the thing we see constantly: someone buys a perfectly decent digital scale, then tries to weigh loose dried herbs directly on the tiny platform. Half the material slides off. They cup their hand around it, accidentally lean on the scale, and the reading jumps by 0.3g. Then they message us asking if the scale is broken. It's not — they just need a cup.
These 5 weighing cups solve that problem in about 2 seconds. Place a cup on the scale, hit tare to zero it out, and pour your material in. The raised walls keep everything contained, so nothing escapes onto your desk or disappears into the carpet. According to research published in PMC, measurement errors with loose dosing devices tend to increase with larger portions — a contained cup reduces spillage and keeps your readings consistent. You get 5 cups in the set, which means you can pre-portion different materials without washing between each one, or keep a dedicated cup for specific substances.
One honest limitation: these are basic weighing cups, not laboratory-grade beakers. They do the job brilliantly for home use — herbs, supplements, gems, small components — but if you need graduated volume markings or heat resistance, you're looking at a different product. For weight measurement on a digital scale, though, this is exactly what you want. We'd pick this set over trying to improvise with bottle caps or folded paper every time.
We've been selling digital scales since the early days of the shop, and the number one complaint has always been the same: "the platform is too small." A 0.01g pocket scale is a precision instrument, but most of them have a weighing surface barely larger than a matchbox. That's fine for a single coin or a tiny calibration weight — not so much for a scoop of dried herb that wants to go everywhere. These cups feel light in the hand, almost like thick foil, which is exactly what you want. Heavy cups eat into your scale's maximum capacity. Light cups leave the full range available for your actual material.
The texture inside the cups is smooth enough that powder doesn't cling to the walls, so you get a clean pour when you're done. That said, if you're working with anything sticky or resinous, give the cup a quick wipe between uses. A dry cloth is enough — no need for solvents.
Getting weight right isn't just about being precise for the sake of it. According to research on liquid medication dosing published in PMC, measurement accuracy varies significantly depending on the device used — and the same principle applies to dry materials. A study on dosing accuracy found that subjects were more likely to measure incorrect amounts when using less appropriate tools (Yin et al., 2007, PubMed ID: 18056832). Translating that to dry weighing: the right container on the right scale gives you a reading you can trust. A folded Post-it note does not.
For context, if you're weighing botanical material at 0.01g resolution, even a small amount of spillage — say 0.05g falling off the platform — represents a meaningful percentage error on doses under 1g. A contained cup keeps that error close to zero. According to research published by Elliot et al. and reviewed in PMC (PMC9613386), the physical characteristics of the measuring device directly affect accuracy. Same logic here: a cup matched to your scale's platform keeps everything where it should be.
They fit most pocket and platform scales with a flat weighing surface. If your scale has a platform of at least 5cm across, you're sorted. For very small jewellery scales with a recessed pan, check that the cup sits flat without wobbling.
Very little — just a few grams each. That's the point. Use the tare function on your scale to zero out the cup weight before adding material, and the full weighing capacity stays available for your substance.
Kitchen scales typically measure to the nearest 1g or 0.5g, which is fine for cooking but not precise enough for herbs, supplements, or gems. A digital pocket scale reading to 0.01g paired with these cups gives you the accuracy you actually need.
Yes. Warm water and mild soap, then dry thoroughly before your next use. Residual moisture adds weight and can affect sensitive readings. A quick wipe with a dry cloth works for most situations between uses.
Five cups let you pre-portion different materials without cleaning between each measurement. Weigh out 5 different herbs, line them up, done. It also means you've got spares if one gets bent or lost — and at this price, it's a no-brainer.
For powders, use a flat edge — a clean ruler or the back of a knife — to sweep excess off the top of the cup. For loose-leaf herbs or gems, simply add or remove small pinches until your scale reads the target weight. Slow and steady beats dumping and guessing.
Good practice is to calibrate any digital scale regularly with a known calibration weight. The cups themselves don't affect calibration — just tare the cup weight before each measurement and you're accurate from the start.
Last updated: April 2026