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Updated June 2026 · 7 min read · UK Japanese knife specialists
The chef knife is the one knife that earns its place in your hand every single day. If you only ever buy one good knife, this is it — so it's worth getting right. For most cooks, the best chef knife today is a Japanese one: harder steel that holds a sharper edge for longer, a thinner blade that glides rather than wedges, and a lighter feel that makes long prep sessions easier on the wrist.
Below are the three we'd recommend from our own range, what makes a chef knife worth buying, and how to choose between them.
Key takeaway
For the great majority of home cooks, an 8" Japanese gyuto in VG10 steel is the best all-round chef knife — sharp, versatile, and a joy to use. Our top pick is the Haruta 8" Gyuto (£89.99). Choose a kiritsuke if you want a pointed, precision blade, or a full set if you'd rather kit out the whole kitchen at once.
What makes a great chef knife
Four things separate a knife you'll love from one that ends up in a drawer.
The steel
Steel decides how sharp a knife gets and how long it stays that way. VG10 is a Japanese stainless steel prized for taking a very keen edge and holding it — which is why it's the core of our Haruta range, clad in 67 layers of Damascus steel for strength and that distinctive rippled pattern. Harder steel means fewer sharpening sessions and cleaner cuts in between. Learn more in our VG10 steel guide.
Length and shape
Eight inches is the classic chef-knife length — long enough to handle large ingredients, short enough to stay controllable. A gyuto's gently curved belly lets you rock-chop herbs and aromatics, while its pointed tip handles fine work. If you're unsure, our guide on what size chef knife to buy first walks through it.
Weight and balance
Japanese chef knives are typically lighter and more nimble than chunky German ones, letting the sharp edge do the work rather than brute weight. Balance should feel neutral in a pinch grip — neither tip-heavy nor handle-heavy.
Edge and care
A harder Japanese edge is sharper but asks for a little respect: hand-wash and dry it, use a wooden or plastic board, and keep it keen on a whetstone. None of it is difficult — see our complete knife care guide.
Our top picks
★★★★★ 4.87 (110 reviews)
Pros
✓ The all-purpose Japanese chef knife — does everything
✓ Razor-sharp VG10 edge, 67-layer Damascus
✓ Curved belly for rocking, pointed tip for detail
Cons
– Hand-wash only, like all quality knives
– One knife, not a full set
★★★★★ 4.87 (110 reviews)
Pros
✓ Dramatic pointed tip for precise, detailed work
✓ Same VG10 Damascus steel and edge
✓ The chef's-status blade — looks the part
Cons
– Flatter profile rewards push-cutting over rocking
– A touch more technique to master than a gyuto
★★★★★ 4.87 (110 reviews)
Pros
✓ A curated set of everyday knives plus a sharpening steel
✓ Same VG10 Damascus blades, matching handles
✓ Better value per knife than buying singly
Cons
– A bigger outlay than a single knife
– More than a minimalist kitchen needs
Compare our picks
| Knife | Price | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Haruta 8" Gyuto — best overall | £89.99 | One do-everything chef knife |
| Haruta 8" Kiritsuke | £89.99 | Precision and a pointed tip |
| Haruta 5-Piece Set | £349.99 | Kitting out the whole kitchen |
All three share the same VG10 Damascus steel, so you're choosing shape and scope, not quality. If you want one knife to reach for every day, the gyuto is the answer. Prefer a pointed, precise blade with presence on the board? The kiritsuke. Building a kitchen from scratch — or buying a serious gift? The set earns its keep.
Japanese vs Western chef knife
A traditional German or French chef knife is heavier, with softer steel and a more curved blade built for rocking. It's tough and forgiving, but it dulls faster and feels less precise. A Japanese chef knife uses harder steel at a finer edge angle, so it's sharper out of the box and stays that way longer — the trade-off is that it prefers hand-washing and a whetstone over a dishwasher and a pull-through sharpener. For anyone who enjoys cooking and is happy to look after a knife, the Japanese option wins on the board. For the full breakdown, see santoku vs chef knife and our gyuto spotlight.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best all-round chef knife?
For most cooks, an 8-inch Japanese gyuto in VG10 steel. It's sharp, versatile and light, handling everything from vegetables to meat. Our pick is the Haruta 8" Gyuto at £89.99.
What size chef knife should I buy?
Eight inches suits most people — big enough for large ingredients, still easy to control. Smaller hands or tighter boards may prefer a 7-inch blade, while those with lots of space sometimes go to 9 or 10 inches.
Are Japanese chef knives better than German ones?
For most home cooks, yes — they're sharper, harder and lighter. German knives are heavier and more forgiving but dull faster. The Japanese edge needs hand-washing and a whetstone, which is a fair trade for the performance.
Is one good chef knife enough?
For most cooking, yes. A single 8-inch chef knife covers the great majority of prep. A paring knife and a bread knife are the two most useful additions when you're ready to expand — or a set covers it all at once.
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