Whetstone vs Honing Steel | Which Should You Use?

Whetstone versus honing steel for sharpening Japanese kitchen knives

In short

They do different jobs, so you want both. A whetstone sharpens — it removes a tiny amount of steel to form a fresh edge, every month or two. A honing rod realigns the edge between uses and removes no steel. For hard Japanese knives (VG10 / AUS-10, ~60–61 HRC), sharpen on a whetstone and hone with a fine diamond or ceramic rod — a soft, smooth butcher's steel is too gentle to true these blades.

When sharpening a traditional Japanese knife (or any knife for that matter) certain techniques, methods, and tools are needed to do an optimal job and create the desired sharp knife edge.

When it comes to sharpening a knife in the 21st century, there is a wide range of new methods that look to utilise modern technology however, sometimes the best approach that you can take is a traditional method and this then leads to the debate of which tool you should use to sharpen knives, a whetstone or honing steel?

In order to maintain your kitchen knife and ensure it always holds a sharp edge, you will need to use a combination of both a whetstone and honing steel. Honing steel should be used after every use of a kitchen knife to realign curled edges and a whetstone should be used every few months (depending on how frequently you use your knife) to sharpen your knife and for a new edge.

The differences and uses of both a whetstone and honing steel are often confused, misinterpreted, or simply used incorrectly.

Knowing what the difference is between the two and when/how you should use each one will be the difference between your knife holding a sharp edge for a long period of time (often generations when it comes to traditional Japanese knives) or being frequently blunt and producing poor quality cuts.

Table of contents

Whetstone vs Honing Steel

Close-up of a sharp knife edge showing the fine burrs that honing realigns

Maintaining a sharp edge is something that is essential when using a kitchen knife and this is true whether you are a home cook or a professional chef. Most knives (ignoring the serrated bread knife) will look to the naked eye as though they have a very smooth and straight edge.

It could be easy to assume that the smoother the edge of your knife is, the sharper it will be, however, most knives when looked at from a microscopic level are actually made up of very small burrs.

These burrs (which resemble teeth) are what contribute to a blade having a sharp edge alongside some other factors like the angle the edge was ground to and what material was used for the blade.

Repeated use when cutting through food and chopping against a board will start to bend these burrs out of alignment and it's the curling of steel on the edge of a blade that results in a dull knife. With that said, below are the two most common tools used to sharpen your knife and realign the edge.

Note - as you read through each tool though, keep in mind how the knife becomes dull and what effect these tools have to prevent it.

What Is the Difference Between a Whetstone and Honing Steel?

A whetstone and honing steel are two of the most common sharpening tools for kitchen knives and in particular, Japanese knives. While these are both considered sharpening tools, this is actually a common misconception;

While a whetstone is primarily used to sharpen and reform the edge of a knife, honing steel is not a sharpening tool and it’s actually used to realign curled edges, this is where the misconception often arises. Honing steel helps to maintain a sharp edge however it does not actually contribute to “sharpening” of the edge.

If you were to only use honing steel to sharpen your knife, the blade will gradually dull over time with repeated use until it gets to the point where it is almost unusable. This will, of course, be frustrating for any knife owner that can’t work out why the honing steel won’t sharpen their knives.

Likewise, if you were to only ever use a sharpening stone without regularly honing the knife, you’d find yourself having to sharpen the knife much more frequently and would reduce the lifespan of your knife as you’d be constantly removing layers of steel from the edge to keep reforming it.

The key difference between these two methods is therefore whether or not steel is removed during the process as this will indicate whether you are sharpening or honing your knife.

While the topic of conversation is usually which is the best option for sharpening a knife out of a whetstone and honing steel (hence whetstone vs honing steel), the correct answer is that you should actually use both to maintain a sharp edge for your knife.

What Is a Whetstone?

A knife being sharpened on an orange whetstone

A whetstone (whet meaning to sharpen a blade) translates to literally meaning sharpening stone. A whetstone is a traditional method used to sharpen blades however it is also a sharpening method that many people prefer to avoid using because it can be quite difficult to grasp the technique needed.

A whetstone is a rectangular block of dense material (flat stone) that is made available in different sizes of grit, similar to sandpaper. The variation of grit can range from coarse to very fine which allows you to sharpen varying degrees of bluntness whilst also being able to finely sharpen/polish the blade after using a coarse stone first.

Sharpening on a whetstone is the most efficient way to sharpen a knife for most chefs or general knife users as it removes a minimal amount of steel from the blade which extends the knifes life cycle (when compared with more abrasive sharpening options like an electric knife sharpener) however they can be very tricky to learn to use.

A routine touch-up on a whetstone only takes a few minutes once you are comfortable with the technique; it is mainly reprofiling a very dull or damaged edge that takes longer. It is a manual task that requires sharpening your knife at the correct angle in order to form the edge, and this can be tricky to do consistently at first, especially for novice users.

Despite the initial difficulty of learning to use a whetstone, there is almost a unanimous agreement that sharpening on a whetstone is the best method to take to restore the edge on your blade and by removing minimal steel it will also allow you to get the maximum longevity out of your knife.

What Is a Honing Steel?

Honing a kitchen knife on a long sharpening rod to realign the edge

Honing steel, typically in the form of a long, flat, or oval rod measuring up to 1 foot in length, is an implement used to realign curled edges and remove excessive burrs on the edge of the blade. When you look directly at the edge of a blade, it should be straight from heel to tip with no divots or bumps along the edge.

The key to a sharp edge is that it stays straight and in alignment all the way along the edge, any area that the steel has folded over (no matter how slight or seemingly insignificant) will result in a significantly reduced cutting capacity.

The blades will still be sharp enough to pierce human skin and would not be considered blunt, but the effectiveness, when used in a kitchen, would be greatly reduced and this is why regular honing with a honing rod is essential.

The type of rod you use should match the hardness of your knife. A traditional soft, smooth steel rod is fine for a softer Western stainless-steel knife, but it is too gentle to true the much harder steel used in many high-carbon Japanese blades. For a Japanese santoku or gyuto, use a fine ceramic or diamond rod, which is hard enough to realign (and, in the case of diamond, lightly refresh) the edge.

The process of honing a knife simply involves passing the edge of your knife along the rod for a few swipes on either side of the blade (assuming that you are using a double bevel knife) with a very slight amount of pressure to remove the excessive burrs and folded edge.

As mentioned earlier, this does not remove any meaningful amount of steel from the blade and is simply a maintenance technique that is used to maintain a sharp edge, not to create one.

The tools for the job

Sharpen on the Whetstone Sharpening Stones (£59.99), and hone hard Japanese blades with a fine diamond sharpening steel (from £54.99) — not a soft butcher's steel.

Shop sharpening & honing →

Final Thoughts

People often wonder which option out of a whetstone and honing steel they should use when it comes to sharpening a knife and the simple answer is that you should actually be using both.

While there are alternative sharpening options to a whetstone, this doesn’t replace the fact that you still need to regularly hone your knife. It’s the process of honing and sharpening that will maintain your blade in the long term and both techniques are needed throughout the week, month, and year depending on how frequently you use your knife.

FAQs

What's the difference between a whetstone and a honing steel?

A whetstone sharpens your knife by removing a tiny amount of steel to form a fresh edge. A honing rod realigns the existing edge between uses and removes no steel. They do different jobs, so most cooks use both.

Do I need both a whetstone and a honing steel?

Yes. Hone regularly between uses to keep the edge straight and true, and sharpen on a whetstone every month or two (depending on how much you cook) to restore the edge. Honing alone will not bring back a dull knife.

Can you use a honing steel on Japanese knives?

Use a fine ceramic or diamond rod with light pressure. A soft, smooth traditional butcher's steel is too gentle to true hard Japanese blades (VG10 or AUS-10, around 60–61 HRC).

Do honing steels wear out?

A quality diamond or ceramic rod lasts for years of normal home use. Keep it clean and wipe it after use; there is no need to replace it often.

Do you use water or oil on a whetstone?

For Japanese knives, use a water stone with water, never oil. Soak or splash it as the maker directs and top up with water as you sharpen.

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