Kitchen knives · Specialist Guide

How to Buy Japanese Kitchen Knives from Japan

Japan forges the best kitchen knives in the world, and buying at the source means more selection and better prices than imported retail. Here’s how to choose the right knife and import it confidently.

Quick answer: Japanese knives are sold by makers and shops, plus a strong secondhand market, much of it Japan-facing — so overseas buyers use a proxy. The big decisions are blade shape (gyuto, santoku, petty, nakiri, yanagiba), steel (sharper-but-needy carbon vs low-maintenance stainless), and bevel/handle type. Check your country’s blade-import rules before ordering.

Why buy knives from Japan

Japan’s knife regions — Sakai, Seki, Tsubame-Sanjo and others — produce everything from affordable workhorses to handmade pieces from named blacksmiths. Buying at the source unlocks small makers and shop selections that never reach overseas retailers, usually at better prices. For enthusiasts, it’s the difference between a handful of imported options and the full universe.

Blade shapes explained

KnifeUse
GyutoAll-purpose chef’s knife
SantokuShorter all-rounder, great for home cooks
PettySmall utility/paring tasks
NakiriVegetables (straight edge)
YanagibaSingle-bevel slicer for sashimi
DebaSingle-bevel for fish butchery

Steel: carbon vs stainless

  • Carbon steel (e.g. shirogami/白紙, aogami/青紙) — takes a keener edge and is easy to sharpen, but rusts and patinas; needs drying and care.
  • Stainless (e.g. VG10, ginsan) — lower maintenance, rust-resistant, very forgiving; slightly harder to get the absolute keenest edge.
  • Clad/Damascus — a hard core with softer cladding (often for looks and easier care).

Pick by lifestyle: carbon for enthusiasts who’ll maintain it, stainless for everyday low-fuss use.

Bevel & handle

  • Double bevel — sharpened both sides; works for left or right hand; most Western-style use.
  • Single bevel — traditional (yanagiba, deba); incredible for specific tasks but handed and harder to sharpen.
  • Wa (Japanese) handle — light, often wood; Yo (Western) handle — riveted, heavier. Personal preference.

Care, sharpening & condition

Carbon knives need drying after use and will develop a patina; both types benefit from a whetstone rather than pull-through sharpeners. For secondhand knives, ask about chips, rust, how much blade height remains after sharpening, and whether the handle is sound.

Shipping & restrictions

Kitchen knives generally ship internationally, but some countries restrict certain blades and carriers have their own rules. Confirm your local import rules before ordering, and expect careful, protected packing. A proxy will flag anything that can’t ship.

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Frequently asked questions

Are Japanese knives cheaper from Japan?

Often yes — many are forged in Japan, so buying at source beats imported retail and offers far more selection.

Carbon vs stainless — which?

Carbon takes a sharper edge but rusts and needs care; stainless is low-maintenance and forgiving. Choose by how much care you’ll give it.

Can knives ship internationally?

Generally yes, but some countries restrict certain blades and carriers have rules. Check your local import rules first.

Last updated: June 2026. General information; not affiliated with any maker. Verify blade-import rules before buying.