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Top Ten Knives of 2026

March 08, 2026 by Anthony Sculimbrene

Here is what Gemini AI wrote about my Top Ten Knives series: Everyday Commentary updates these lists annually (often appearing in early spring), with 2025 highlighting a shift toward premium, accessible, and high-performance steels like S90V. It got that right. Things it missed? It says I liked the Spyderco Native 5 and the EMPEDC Nymble. One out of three isn’t bad. Oh wait, it is bad. AI gets a 33% and last I checked that was a failing grade. I am actually a bit surprised, given how LLM AIs work that the results are that terrible, especially for a listicles article. How did you screw that up Gemini?

Regardless of what AI thinks, here is the approach: I am going to list 10 knives that I think are noteworthy for how well the match up with a specific need that I think is common among knife owners. These aren’t my favorite knives or a generic list of the ten best knives but 10 knives that I think do something better than other knives. They do not have to be new knives, but I will try to avoid knives that are out of production.

State of the Industry

The US economy is doing poorly by any objective measure other than the stock market, but the stock market’s health is at best a misleading indicator of economic health and at worst, opposite economic growth. Job creation in 2025 was originally stated as okay, but after multiple revisions (from 584,000 to 151,000 to just 116,000), the data shows that there were essentially no jobs added for the year. And in February 2026, we actually had substantial job losses (note that the BLS retreats to the classic lie politicians tell when employment numbers are bad—”overall unemployment stayed steady;” the percentage of unemployment is a useless number because it only counts folks looking for work and not getting it as opposed to the number of people that are without jobs). Note that every month where the total number of jobs went down since 2016 occurred when Trump was President (9 months out of a total of 122 months—all Trump and only 3 of 9 during COVID). But job losses are not the only problem. Since January 2025, inflation has been 3%, with only three months where it was below 2.5% (2.3%, 2.4%, and 2.4%). Wage growth has been almost flat at 3.3% since January 2025. All of this is bad news and the general woes in the economy are being seen in the knife market, too.

The wave of self-published blades has slowed significantly and the number of new kilobuck production knives has basically dried up entirely. Part of this is an absolutely scorched over-saturation of the market by Chinese knife companies. Vosteed, WE/Civivi, CJRB, Kubey, and a handful of other knife companies release a knife, whether it is a fully new design or a variant of an old design, once a week. There simply isn’t enough knife money out there, especially as wallets of regular folks lighten, to support that much new stuff. It used to be: “who is buying all of this stuff?” And now I have shifted to: “what do retailers do with the 46 tons of Chinese knives that come in every week and don’t sell?” At some point all of those boxes with annoying nylon knife tacos have to go somewhere.

Threats abound, too, making sure that things will not get better soon (I am betting around 2028 or so, coincidentally or not). Tariffs, which were, in part, illegal, and in whole, terrible for the economy, really impact knives. And for the half-witted morons that thought or claimed overseas companies pay the tariffs, I assume we no longer need to have that debate as I will guess that virtually everyone in the US has now received a surprise upcharge on something they bought that is a direct result of changes in tariff policy. After being burned by review samples from a Chinese maker I was trying to give a spotlight to, I am simply not reviewing a whole category of products. I don’t buy them from sites like Amazon. I won’t ask for them as review samples. And if someone DMs me on IG, I tell them no. Maybe that was the intention of the tariffs. But here is the problem—there is nothing filling the void. It’s not like American companies are rushing to fill the gaps left in the $30 knife market.

Except for one—Wal Mart. Wal Mart’s release of the original Ozark Grail knife was a warning. The release of the truly superior Ozark Grail Tanto is a sign of impending doom. With the tariffs wiping out a whole tier of brands and no US maker rushing to fill the void, Wal Mart’s perfectly timed release of a line of competitive budget knives could be the beginning of the end for a lot of household name brands. It is almost like the capitalist system we have in America isn’t a free market but a rigged game designed to make the rich richer. In case you missed the sarcasm, that is exactly what we have. A careful study of history will show that is what we have ALWAYS had. Genuinely free market capitalism is as foreign to the US as communism is. My guess is that Wal Mart, which would seemingly hate tariffs, studied the market and found that while its goods would cost more, the tariffs would wipe out competition from places like Temu and Ali Baba as people worry that their $7.97 saucepan will actually result in them paying an additional $30 for tariffs. Wal Mart wins big while American brands lose big. And while that has not happened in the knife business, given the economy and an insistence on tariffs, the chance that it does happen in the knife business goes up every day.

There is one bright spot on the horizon—I do think that we will see a genuine shift in knife laws and the FSA will fall in the next few years. Since 2010, when New Hampshire kicked off a wave of auto ban repeals, all but three states have eliminated their auto bans. Minnesota, New Mexico, and to a lesser extent Washington state still have them on the books. Hawaii got rid of theirs too, but their state Supreme Court has rejected Bruen and constitutional federalism in its entirety. Even with all this change, there has been no increase in knife crimes. Its almost like there was an unjustifiable moral panic that resulted in the FSA and, in fact, there was NEVER a problem with knives that deploy using a spring. Again, I am laying the sarcasm in pretty thick. If the FSA fell and American brands could sell autos on Amazon, given the tariffs, it might be a good thing. Of course overseas brands would do the same, but the tariffs might make people trepidatious about buying them.

One last thing—some brands have really jacked up their prices. I am not sure why this is happening now, other than they can or that years of high inflation have forced them to, but some companies have prices unmoored from both the complexity of their designs and market trends. And as the general economic pictures shows, folks don’t have the money for the same knives to cost more.

Recommendations

Best Knife for Most People: TRM N2

I like the Sage 6, but I had a piece of the carbon fiber handle near the clip chip off and it got caught in my finger. It was a mess. A CF splinter is hard, hard, hard to pull out of the skin. It’s a nightmare splinter, on part with pressure treated lumber splinters. I have never received a nightmare splinter from G10. So yeah, its really small things (literally and figuratively) that separates these two knives, but in the N2 is still the best. Honestly, it is super duper close and I don’t think this will happen for most folks so let price be the guide. In that case I like the Magnacut version of the N2 and then the Sprint Run of the Sage 6 in S90V.

Best High End EDC: Anso of Denmark Aros

It is so hard to take this knife out of the pocket. Not to use, but to put down and carry something else. It so graceful, so sleek and so refined that all of the slabs titanium high end knives out there kind of seem embarrassing by comparison. Do you want something genuinely different and imminently pocketable or yet another TFF? Choose right. Choose the Aros.

Best Fixed Blade for Most People: Victorinox Venture Pro

The KaBar BK16 is great. The ESEE 4HM is nice too. But they are a bit niche. The BK16 really shines when it is fully upgraded, that is you ditch the terrible sheath and you swap out the handles. And really that’s not a reasonable expectation for most people. The 4HM is a bit more plug and play but it lacks a truly stainless steel. That is compensated for by having a nice thick coating, but in 2026 we can probably update to something more sensible like actual stainless steel. Enter the new(ish) Victorinox fixed blade the Venture. You won’t find a flaw and the sheath tools (which are the scale tools from a SAK plus a ferro rod) are decent. The sheath is like a Mora sheath that actually works on a belt. Then there is the goodness that is the handle. EVERY VIC HANDLE CRUSHES and this is no different. Their kitchen knives are beloved by professional chefs and the critical gaze of Cooks Illustrated (who are, by the way, the standard for product review) because of the handle. The much more expensive Outdoor Master proved Victorinox has the chops in outdoor knives, too but that is a $250+ knife, not something most people are willing to buy. The Venture Pro is around $120. That’s reasonable and it will work for years. Thanks the 14C28N steel you can toss it in a camping crate and pull it out once a year and it will be fine. But you probably won’t want to do that. You will probably want to use it more, even if for just some yard maintenance and backyard fires. Who said that stuff had to be boring?

Gone Too Soon: Bridgeport Knife Co. 395 v2

How does a knife this good come from a company that simply vanished into thin air? There are dozens, perhaps hundreds of self-published blades out there. Very, very few are good. Only a handful are peers to the 395, and of those none are better. We are talking about the Pena X Series and Sharp By Design knives. This knife sits with them quite comfortably and yet, less than three years after this knife came out, the Bridgeport Knife Co website ends in a place filler. Well, that stinks. And if you wanted a 395, go get one now. They are great blades, well made, and likely to increase in value. How can we keep getting some of the broccoli flatulence-level stuff we get in the self-published blade market space and this guy goes out of business?

Secret Handshake of the Knife Intelligensia: Nuthin’

This is a sign of the times. There is no clear “winner” here. I think the new Grimsmo Fjell could be here but it doesn’t seem to have captured as much of the zeitgeist of the IKC to say it is the winner. The Arius is still well-liked, as is the Lamnia, and the Roosevelt. Honestly, I think this part of the market is perhaps the dumbest or second dumbest place to spend money. There just aren’t a lot of reasons to buy one of these knives. They are as expensive as a true custom from an A-Tier (but not S-Tier) maker. They have great fit and finish, but so do dozens and dozens other knives, some of them under $100 from China. Finally, these knives are made in batches that are, as we go along, getting bigger and bigger. What is the difference between a knife made in the high hundreds and a knife made in the low thousands? I have no idea. And there is this—there just aren’t that many people that can spend this kind of money on a knife that isn’t unique (and no, flashy ano doesn’t count). The only knife purchase that strikes me as less sensible is the kilobuck full production knives like the CKF stuff that sells for $1,100, but is just a straight up overseas made production knife with slightly upscaled materials (like polished PVD…when was that something that demanded a premium price?).

Best Value: Ozark Trail Tanto

The Ozark Grail was a good knife. It was about the same quality as a lot of the cheap overseas knives on Amazon. The Tanto, though, was a step up in terms of steel, handle material, and fit and finish. The Tanto is every bit as good as a Civivi or a Vosteed. And it is still a huge bargain at $20. I don’t like the blade shape, but a reader sent me an image of his Tanto where he switched it over to a drop point. I have a shop project ahead of me.

Best Knife Out of Left Field: Spydero SpyNano

I would have NEVER thought I would have liked this knife. The Lionsteel Spyderco collabs have been pretty bad or at least pretty boring up until now. If I am being fully honest, I have never really been smitten by a Lionsteel knife. They were well made but always had one or two niggling issues that held them back from being anything better than just okay. But this knife, oh this knife, it is a singing bit of glory. The sculpting around the edges gives the SpyNano a unique look and feel. The detent is 100% dialed in, often a stumble point for Lionsteel stuff. And the quirky, weird blade, where the Spyderco hole was grafted on to the blade of the Lionsteel NA01, is oddly fitting for this nugget of a knife. In many ways this knife is a more refined and complex version of the Spyderco Techno, my first, and until now, my favorite nugget knife. This was a sprint run, so it might be hard to track down once it sells out. If you like these small, stocky blades, go get one. And made it your own by oiling the micarta (here is my guide on oiling micarta).

Best Knife Your Grandpa Would Also Love: Case Crossroads Barlow

It is hard to find a modern traditional that doesn’t feel like a really gilded lily. And sure, those knives with their fluted bolsters and mokuti shields are fun, but none of them seem like something your grandpa would actually carry. There were ways that my grandfather used to let me know things fell into this category of gilded lillies. First, he would tell me it was “tits on a boar hog.” When he was around polite company that phrase became “its as handy as a screen door on a submarine.” Both were the equivalent of saying something was completely unnecessary. The true complement, which I firmly believe the Case Crossroads Barlow would earn, is “that’s as handy as a whistle on a plow.” Of course, this is VERY handy, as when you are plowing a field, especially with a ox-pulled plow, you’d get dusty and dirty and instead of trekking inside and making a mess, you could use the whistle on the plow to get someone’s attention and they could bring you a cool drink on a hot and dusty day. The look and feel of this knife is not so blingy as to turn off a grandpa, but it is new enough and interesting for us knife nerds. The S35VN is a great steel for a traditional knife and it has a surface treatment that makes it feel a bit old-timey.

Something Wicked This Way Comes: Kunwu Compadre

Oh what a wonderful knife and it’s so appropriate to have this knife as the winner for the coolest, most wicked looking knife. It has a ton of flourishes all of which look amazing and actually serve to make the knife better. Want to know something funny? Twice, while I was not paying attention, the Compadre’s blade guillotined my thumb. It was totally my fault as I should have been more attentive to a blade this heavy. Why is that noteworthy? Because of the origin of the original quote. It comes from one of my three favorite Shakespeare plays (#3, if you want to know). Here is the quote:

“By the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes.”

This is from Act 4, Scene 1 of MacBeth. So yeah, cool and appropriate. By the way, #2 is Hamlet and #1 is Othello. Iago is utterly peerless in all of fiction.

Back in the Saddle: Hinderer Half Track

Why did Hinderer take this out of production for so long? It is the Hinderer-est small knife ever with its geometric lines that somehow work well in the hand, slabby blade and scales, and somewhat simple construction. I like the XM-18 3” a lot, but I think I like this knife better. At 2.75” it is the Strider PT of the Hinderer line up and that knife is a classic. Now they have come back in to production in dribs and drabs, they come in and out of stock on a weekly basis. If the XM-24 sells well enough to justify being sporadically but regularly made, let’s just keep the Half-Track in full production, please. And if you haven’t had the XM-24 in hand, it is a positively gigantic knife.

Amazon Links

Kunwu Padre (the bigger version)

Victorinox Venture Pro

Spyderco SpyNano

Case Crossroads Barlow

March 08, 2026 /Anthony Sculimbrene
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