'Twilight' Fans Can Grab a $7 Noodle Bowl Set at Five Below Now
Five Below's $7 Twilight noodle bowl, spoon, and chopsticks set is a licensed find that makes a surprisingly solid housewarming gift when bundled right.

The worst housewarming gifts share a fatal flaw: they look thoughtful for about 30 seconds before quietly migrating to the back of a cabinet. Scented candles that smell vaguely of "ocean breeze," generic picture frames, decorative coasters that clash with every color scheme. The real challenge of gifting someone who just signed a lease is finding something that costs under $10, feels genuinely personal, and actually gets used on a Tuesday night.
Five Below's $7 Twilight noodle bowl set solves all three problems at once. The officially licensed three-piece bundle includes a ceramic noodle bowl, a set of chopsticks, and a spoon, and it sits squarely in the "whimsigoth" homewares wave: gothic-adjacent aesthetics made approachable, playful, and priced low enough to actually stock a kitchen with rather than just display.
Affordable, officially licensed kitchenware like this sells out quickly, and the gothic-inspired aesthetic allows for personal expression and practical use year-round. The intersection of pop culture and home dining has reached a fever pitch in 2026, with Five Below becoming one of the clearest proof points, building out a roster of character kitchen sets that turn an ordinary bowl of ramen into a visual moment.
The Twilight franchise, built on Stephenie Meyer's novels and the film series that dominated pop culture in the late 2000s and early 2010s, has never fully left. The fanbase that grew up with Edward Cullen and Bella Swan drove a well-documented "Twilight renaissance" across social media that has kept licensed merchandise viable and culturally relevant. A bowl with Twilight imagery is not a relic. It is a personality statement.
At $7, the set occupies a gifting tier most people underestimate. The problem is never the price point. The problem is presentation. Handed over alone in a plastic bag, any $7 item telegraphs "I grabbed this last-minute." Built into a first-night-in kit, that same $7 piece becomes the anchor of something genuinely considered.
Here is how to build that kit for under $20: pair the bowl with a packet of quality ramen or an instant noodle variety pack, which runs $2 to $4 at most grocery stores. Add a single-serve box of tea bags in an earthy or spiced flavor to hold the gothic aesthetic, typically $3 to $5. Tuck in a small votive candle in a dark or woodsy scent — Five Below carries plenty of those in the $3 to $5 range — and drop everything into a kraft paper bag with tissue paper. Total cost lands between $15 and $20. Total assembly time: about 20 minutes. The message it sends is specific: I thought about what your first night in this apartment actually looks like. That specificity is worth considerably more than any price tag.
The durable construction makes the set a practical choice for students in dorm rooms or families looking to add some character to their weekly movie and meal nights, and the gothic print on the bowl photographs well against a steaming bowl of ramen, which matters for anyone who documents their meals.
On the practical side of giftability: Five Below's ceramic noodle bowl sets in the same product line are confirmed dishwasher-safe on the top rack and microwave-safe, which matters enormously for any gift headed into a dorm or first apartment where nobody is hand-washing a bowl after midnight. Because these licensed sets are part of a highly sought-after seasonal rotation, they are known for selling out rapidly once they hit the digital storefront, so checking both local Five Below locations and the retailer's website in the same shopping session is the smart move. Spotting it on a store shelf is worth acting on immediately.
For anyone whose new homeowner is emphatically not Team Edward, Five Below's licensed kitchen line offers solid alternatives at comparable price points. The Hello Kitty noodle bowl and chopsticks set, a Sanrio-licensed ceramic piece priced at $5, brings the same personality-forward practicality and comes in multiple character options including Keroppi and My Melody — confirmed dishwasher-safe and microwave-safe across the line. Disney's Stitch ceramic bowl with chopsticks lands in the same price neighborhood and carries the kind of cross-generational nostalgia that plays for a wide audience, from college freshmen to adults who grew up watching "Lilo and Stitch" as a comfort rewatch. Five Below also carried a Nightmare Before Christmas set in this same bowl-and-chopsticks format, which works naturally for anyone whose aesthetic sits closer to Tim Burton than Stephenie Meyer.
What these alternatives collectively demonstrate is that fandom kitchen gifting at the micro-budget level is no longer a niche discovery. These are officially licensed products made from durable ceramic, paired with functional eating accessories, and priced low enough that they feel like a find rather than a compromise. A new tenant does not have to commit cabinet space to a large, awkward collectible. They get a bowl they will actually eat out of, carrying a visual identity that reflects something real about who they are.
At a $7 price point, it is an unbeatable housewarming gift or a just-because treat that adds immediate personality to a kitchen cabinet. That is the standard a $40 cutting board from a home goods chain rarely manages to clear, because a cutting board tells a new tenant nothing about themselves. A Twilight bowl packed inside an $18 first-night-in kit with a candle and ramen tells them everything.
The one real caveat is speed. Seasonal licensed sets at Five Below are not restocked indefinitely, and when a cycle ends, it ends. The window between "in stock" and "sold out" on finds like these is typically measured in weeks, not months.
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