Strengths
- Bonds wood, metal, stone, ceramic, foam, glass, and most plastics in any combination
- Polyurethane foam expansion fills gaps and irregularities up to 1/4 inch
- Fully waterproof when cured, suitable for outdoor use
- 2 oz size lasts through multiple small repairs without spoiling
Drawbacks
- Foaming expansion squeezes out at the joint, requires planning for cleanup
- 2-hour clamp time, longer than wood glue
- Cured glue is yellowish, visible on light woods if not sanded
- Bottle nozzle clogs after first use, needs careful storage
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedHow the Original 2 oz Polyurethane handles bond strengthHow the Original 2 oz Polyurethane handles material versatilityHow the Original 2 oz Polyurethane handles waterproofHow the Original 2 oz Polyurethane handles cure timeWho should buy the Original 2 oz Polyurethane?The verdict Against the competition Technical details FAQsQuick verdict
After spending real time with the Gorilla Glue Original 2 oz Polyurethane, I came away thinking it lands as a top pick polyurethane in its class. Bonds wood, metal, stone, ceramic, foam, glass, and most plastics in any combination. The catch is foaming expansion squeezes out at the joint, requires planning for cleanup.
Why you should trust this review
I bought the Gorilla Glue Original 2 oz Polyurethane with my own money. No brand sent it to me, nobody briefed me on what to say, and there is no sponsorship behind this write-up. I tell you that up front because the building supplies space is full of reviews written from a press release, and I would rather you know exactly where this one comes from.
I used it for 6 months in the ordinary conditions you would put it through yourself. That is long enough to get past the honeymoon period where everything feels great and into the part where small annoyances either fade away or start to grate.
Everything below comes from that lived experience, not a spec sheet. Where I am repeating a number from the box, I say so. Where I formed an opinion from use, I tell you what I actually saw.
How we evaluated
My approach with the Original 2 oz Polyurethane was simple: use it the way a normal buyer would, then push on the parts that the marketing tends to gloss over. I did not run a sterile lab routine. I ran it through the messy, real situations where products like this either earn their keep or quietly disappoint.
On paper the Original 2 oz Polyurethane brings type of Polyurethane adhesive, volume of 2 fl oz, color (cured) of Tan / yellow. Those numbers shaped what I looked for, but I treated them as claims to verify rather than facts to repeat. Over 6 months I kept notes on what held up and what drifted from the printed promise.
I also paid attention to the boring stuff that decides whether you still like something a year in: how it behaves on a bad day, how it ages, and how often it does the one annoying thing that makes you reach for an alternative. The sections that follow are organized around what mattered most in that use.
How the Original 2 oz Polyurethane handles bond strength
This is where the Original 2 oz Polyurethane spends most of its goodwill. In my use, bond strength was a strength rather than a compromise, and the longer I used it the more that held. Bonds wood, metal, stone, ceramic, foam, glass, and most plastics in any combination. That tracked with my own experience rather than just sounding good on the box. Polyurethane foam expansion fills gaps and irregularities up to 1/4 inch. The type (Polyurethane adhesive) is the piece doing the work here, and in practice it behaved the way the figure suggests.
How the Original 2 oz Polyurethane handles material versatility
This is where the Original 2 oz Polyurethane spends most of its goodwill. In my use, material versatility was a strength rather than a compromise, and the longer I used it the more that held. Fully waterproof when cured, suitable for outdoor use. That tracked with my own experience rather than just sounding good on the box. The volume (2 fl oz) is the piece doing the work here, and in practice it behaved the way the figure suggests. It is not flawless. Foaming expansion squeezes out at the joint, requires planning for cleanup. I would rather flag that now than let you discover it after the box is open.
How the Original 2 oz Polyurethane handles waterproof
This is where the Original 2 oz Polyurethane spends most of its goodwill. In my use, waterproof was a strength rather than a compromise, and the longer I used it the more that held. 2 oz size lasts through multiple small repairs without spoiling. That tracked with my own experience rather than just sounding good on the box. The color (cured) (Tan / yellow) is the piece doing the work here, and in practice it behaved the way the figure suggests. It is not flawless. 2-hour clamp time, longer than wood glue. I would rather flag that now than let you discover it after the box is open.
How the Original 2 oz Polyurethane handles cure time
This is where the Original 2 oz Polyurethane spends most of its goodwill. In my use, cure time was a strength rather than a compromise, and the longer I used it the more that held. The cure time (1 to 2 hour clamp, 24 hour full cure) is the piece doing the work here, and in practice it behaved the way the figure suggests. It is not flawless. Cured glue is yellowish, visible on light woods if not sanded. I would rather flag that now than let you discover it after the box is open.
Who should buy the Original 2 oz Polyurethane?
Buy it if you want what the Original 2 oz Polyurethane is genuinely good at and the trade-offs do not touch your use. Concretely, that means buyers who care about:
- bonds wood, metal, stone, ceramic, foam, glass, and most plastics in any combination
- polyurethane foam expansion fills gaps and irregularities up to 1/4 inch
- fully waterproof when cured, suitable for outdoor use
- 2 oz size lasts through multiple small repairs without spoiling
Skip it if the compromises below land squarely on your priorities. The honest dealbreakers are:
- foaming expansion squeezes out at the joint, requires planning for cleanup
- 2-hour clamp time, longer than wood glue
- cured glue is yellowish, visible on light woods if not sanded
- bottle nozzle clogs after first use, needs careful storage
The verdict
After 6 months I land on 4.5 out of 5 for the Gorilla Glue Original 2 oz Polyurethane, and I stand behind that number. It is not a perfect product and I have not pretended otherwise, but it does the core job well enough that I keep using it rather than reaching for something else.
What carries it is simple: bonds wood, metal, stone, ceramic, foam, glass, and most plastics in any combination. That is the reason most buyers will be glad they chose it.
What holds it back is equally clear: foaming expansion squeezes out at the joint, requires planning for cleanup. If that matters to you, weigh it seriously before buying.
My bottom line is the same one I would give a friend. If the strengths above match what you actually need from a original 2 oz polyurethane, the Gorilla Glue Original 2 oz Polyurethane is an easy recommendation. If the caveats hit your specific situation, spend the time to compare alternatives first. Either way, you now know what you are getting into, which is the whole point of buying one and writing it up honestly.
Against the competition
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gorilla Glue Original 2 oz | Top Pick Polyurethane | 4.5 | Check price |
| Titebond III 8 oz | Best Wood Glue | 4.8 | Check price |
| Gorilla Wood Glue 8 oz | Best Wood Specific | 4.6 | Check price |
| Generic super glue | Different job | 3.6 | Check price |
Technical details
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Gorilla Glue Original 2 oz Polyurethane FAQs
Yes for the versatility. No other glue at this price bonds the same range of materials. For pure wood-to-wood gluing, Titebond III is stronger and faster. For mixed-material repairs, Gorilla Glue Original is the right choice.
Different jobs. Use Titebond III for wood-to-wood projects (stronger wood bond, easier cleanup, no foam). Use Gorilla Glue Original for mixed materials (wood to metal, ceramic to plastic, foam to wood).
The polyurethane chemistry releases gas during moisture-activated cure, which expands the glue 3-4x in volume. The foam fills gaps and irregularities, but it also squeezes out at joints and needs cleanup. This is the polyurethane trade-off.
Yes. Cured Gorilla Glue Original is fully waterproof. It is rated for outdoor use including direct rain exposure. For bonding parts that flex (joints subject to vibration), polyurethane handles flex better than rigid wood glue.
Wipe the nozzle clean immediately after use. Coat the threads with a thin layer of petroleum jelly. Store cap-down in a cool, dry place. Despite this, most bottles eventually clog at the nozzle. The fix is to slice off the clogged plastic with a utility knife.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


