City Cast DC logo

DC’s Best Unconventional Vending Machines

Posted on November 14, 2024   |   Updated on September 30, 2025
Kaela Cote-Stemmermann

Kaela Cote-Stemmermann

Inciardi Print vending machine at the U.S. Botanic Garden. (Courtesy of Friends of the U.S. Botanical Garden)

Inciardi Print vending machine at the U.S. Botanic Garden. (Courtesy of Friends of the U.S. Botanical Garden)

D.C.’s no stranger to weird vending machines. There have been ones that sell pasta, tarot cards, and even face masks. Sadly, many of these have come and gone, but there are still a handful of unconventional vending machines worth checking out.

Inciardi Art Prints: Multiple Locations

These adorable art vending machines take four quarters and reward you with a credit card-sized surprise art print. There are two D.C. machines – one in the U.S. Botanic Gardens and one at the National Museum of Women in the Arts – each with unique prints inspired by the location.

Champagne Vending Machine: The Marrow Hotel

Sometimes you need emergency Champagne. Luckily, this vending machine is open 24/7. It offers mini bottles of cold Brut or Rosé. First, buy a token from the hotel bar for $30 and then insert it into the machine to retrieve a bottle.

Narcan Vending Machines: Multiple Locations

DC Health has four harm reduction 24-hour vending machines that provide tools such as Narcan and Fentanyl strips, along with hygiene and wellness products. The products are all free, however, you have to call the number listed on the machine and get a one-time access code for access.

Narcan vending machine. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

Narcan vending machine. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

Art-O-Mat Machine: Smithsonian American Art Museum

Located in the museum's Luce Foundation Center, this modified cigarette vending machine now dispenses small pieces of art. Insert $5 and pull the handle on your choice or artist. You don't know exactly what you will get until it comes out!

Cotton Candy Vending Machine: Tyson's Corner

In the food court of the Tyson's Corner Mall is a cute automatic cotton candy machine. You select the flavor and shape you want, pay $10 - $15, and then watch it be made right in front of you.

Art-o-mat is a repurposed vintage cigarette vending machine that now distributes pieces of original artwork. (Boston Globe/Getty Images)

Art-o-mat is a repurposed vintage cigarette vending machine that now distributes pieces of original artwork. (Boston Globe/Getty Images)

Wellfound Foods Vending Machine: Union Station

In a rush? This fancy 24/7 vending machine provides fresh salads, sandwiches, and bowls from local joints like Little Sesame and Chiko. Prices for meals range from $10-$15.

Coming Soon: Book Vending Machine

Local author Lauren Woods is working on bringing a custom vending machine to D.C. that will stock a rotating selection of local literature. Her hope is it will highlight small press authors who have a hard time getting into big bookstores. Location TBD.

Share article

Hey DC

Stay connected to City Cast DC and get ready to join the local conversation.

Can't subscribe? Turn off your ad blocker and try again.

DC's Best

See All

The latest in DC

DC, Explained

How Adams Morgan Got Its Name

How community members gave Adams Morgan and a uniting cause.

A rooftop view of homes covered in snow.
Local CivicsApril 13

Why the Holocaust Museum Self-Censored Before Trump Even Asked

The Holocaust Museum has been quietly changing its content since President Trump returned to office to avoid drawing the administration’s...

The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. (ajay_suresh/Wikimedia Commons)
Food & DrinkApril 9

DC's Top Food Critic’s Favorite Spots

The food critic at the Washington Post has long been seen as an all-powerful — and totally anonymous — figure in the local restaurant ind...

Washington Post food critic Elazar Sontag. (Photo courtesy of Elazar Sontag)
Neighborhood GuidesApril 8

Get to Know 11th Street NW in Columbia Heights

11th Street in Columbia Heights is one of my favorite hangout spot in the District. You can garden, snack on crispy pig ears, and grab fr...

11th Street NW, Columbia Heights. (Google Maps)
DC, ExplainedApril 6

Inside the Story of Elon Musk’s Failed DC Hyperloop

Before Elon Musk's DOGE there was his fantastical hyperloop. But, it went down as one of the biggest transport flops in D.C. history. We...

President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference with Elon Musk. (The Washington Post/Getty Images)
DC, ExplainedApril 2

Mosh Madness: DC’s Next Big Music Festival Is Also a Basketball Tournament

Mosh Madness, D.C.’s premier music festival slash basketball tournament is back for its second iteration this spring. On April 11 the DMV...

Pretty Bitter rock as ballers try to block. (Photo by Bailey Payne)
DC Life HacksApril 1

Hacks To Save Money on Gas in DC

Gas prices around the nation are soaring. Here how to save on gas in D.C.

Gas prices in D.C. keep going up. (The Washington Post/Getty Images)
DC, ExplainedMarch 31

Is Trump Destroying DC’s Architecture?

Between the East Wing of the White House, the proposed Arc de Trump, and whatever’s going to happen to the Kennedy Center, how will Presi...

With Trump’s name on the Kennedy Center, will he also change its look? (Heather Diehl/Getty Images)