Archaeological research from the sites attributed to the Gumelnița Culture carried out over time north of the Danube, especially in Muntenia, intensified as time went by, which led to a better understanding of the evolution of the communities of Gumelniţa in the Lower Danube Basin. The settlements of Gumelnița are arranged on the rivers and their tributaries that cross Muntenia, but also in the Danube Valley. The environment in which the communities of Gumelnița lived was favorable, benefiting from conditions for animal husbandry or practicing incipient farming. The space, which the communities of Gumelniţa occupied and from where the bone tools that we will present in our material were recovered, occupies a large part of Muntenia, geographically located in the Romanian Plain. Through this approach, we intend to present the main tools made of bones from domestic animals, discovered in the settlements of the communities of Gumelniţa, from a typological perspective, but also from the point of view of their functionality. Typologically, our research has led to the identification of three types of tools from bones of domestic animals, namely: tips, chisels and spatulas, which we will present below in this material, referring also to their functionality, where we had available information given by specialized analyses. The raw material was provided by two methods: the reuse of osteological residues from the processing activities of animal products, especially domestic, but also wild, or, the second process, the collection of the horn of Cervus elaphus. As for the supports, both volume and flat supports were used. The large number of types of supports clearly shows an opportunistic way of selection, with the community using the supports at hand, predominant of those of domestic animals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]