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Updated June 2026 · 7 min read · UK Japanese knife specialists
Yes — you can buy a genuinely good Japanese kitchen knife for under £100. The myth that a sharp, well-balanced Japanese blade has to cost £150 or more just isn't true any more. At this price you can have a real VG10 Damascus knife with a hardened, long-lasting edge, or a tidy forged set to kick off a kitchen.
The trade-offs under £100 are mostly about the finish rather than the cutting: handle materials are simpler, you're less likely to get a fitted wooden scabbard, and the very highest layer counts and premium steels (like AUS-10) sit a little above this budget. None of that stops a sub-£100 knife from out-cutting most high-street German blocks.
Below are four picks we sell that genuinely earn their place under £100 — drawn from our single knives and Damascus knife ranges — with real prices, real customer ratings, and honest pros and cons for each.
Key takeaway
For the sharpest edge per pound, a single VG10 Damascus knife like the Riku is the smart buy. If you'd rather start with a complete set, the forged Haru gives you four knives for £99.99 — just accept a softer steel that needs honing more often.
How to choose a Japanese knife under £100
Spend your budget where it matters to the cut. Here's what actually changes at this price.
Steel: VG10 Damascus vs forged stainless
Most of our Damascus knives use a VG10 core — a high-carbon Japanese stainless that hardens to around 60–61 HRC on the Rockwell scale. That hardness is why VG10 takes a keen edge and holds it far longer than a typical European knife. The wavy "Damascus" pattern you see is layered cladding folded around that core; it looks beautiful and helps protect the harder steel inside. Budget forged knives (like the Haru set) use 440C stainless at a lower hardness — tougher and very easy to re-sharpen, but it loses its edge sooner. If you want to understand the core steel properly, our guide to VG10 steel goes deeper.
One knife or a set?
Under £100 you face a real choice: one excellent single knife, or several decent ones. If you already own a basic block and just want one blade that makes prep a pleasure, buy a single VG10 knife in the shape you reach for most. If you're starting from scratch, a budget set gets a few essentials in the drawer for the same money — you can always upgrade the knife you use daily later.
Pick the shape you'll actually use
A santoku or gyuto (chef's knife) covers about 80% of everyday jobs, so it's the smartest single buy for most cooks. A kiritsuke is a striking all-rounder that takes a little practice. Nakiri shapes are brilliant for vegetables. Not sure which size to start with? Our guide to your first knife size helps you decide.
Handle and balance
Under £100 you'll see coloured resin, pakkawood and ebony-effect handles rather than premium burl wood. They're comfortable and hard-wearing — just a touch less of a showpiece. Pick up the knife (or check the blade length) and choose a weight that feels balanced in your grip, not blade-heavy.
The 4 best Japanese knives under £100
★★★★★ 4.89 (62 reviews)
A proper VG10 Damascus blade at a price that's hard to argue with. You can pick exactly the shape you want — a 3.5" paring at £49.99, a 7" santoku at £79.99, or an 8" chef's knife at £89.99 — so every pound goes into the one knife you'll use. It's our most popular budget Damascus line for good reason.
Pros
✓ Hard, long-holding VG10 edge
✓ Choose any blade shape
✓ Outstanding sharpness per pound
Cons
– Simpler handle than premium lines
– No fitted scabbard
Best for: the best cutting edge you can get under £100.
View the Riku →
★★★★★ 4.94 (117 reviews)
Our highest-rated knife of the lot, and a real looker. The black resin handle pairs with a Damascus blade for a knife that feels far dearer than it is. Single knives start at £64.99 — a 6.7" santoku or 8" chef both land under £100 — so you can build your kitchen one striking blade at a time.
Pros
✓ Highest customer rating in the range
✓ Eye-catching Damascus + black handle
✓ Every blade shape available
Cons
– Resin handle won't suit wood purists
– Full sets climb over £100
Best for: a do-everything single knife that looks the part.
View the Aiko →
★★★★★ 4.69 (168 reviews)
The kiritsuke is the chef's status blade — a long, elegant profile that handles like a chef's knife and a slicer in one. This Damascus version with a coloured ebony-effect handle is our most-reviewed single knife, and at £79.99 it's a genuine showpiece for the money. Expect a short learning curve with the pointed tip.
Pros
✓ Showpiece kiritsuke profile
✓ Smart ebony-effect handle
✓ Most-reviewed single in the range
Cons
– Takes practice to master
– One knife, not a set
Best for: a head-turning blade that still cuts like a workhorse.
View the Kiritsuke →
★★★★★ 4.72 (74 reviews)
The only complete set on this list that stays under £100 — a four-piece forged 440C set with neat ebony-effect handles for £99.99 (individual knives start at just £29.99). It won't hold an edge quite like VG10, but it's an honest, good-looking starter kit that gets a few proper shapes in your drawer for the price of one premium blade.
Pros
✓ Four knives under £100
✓ Easy to re-sharpen
✓ Tidy matching handles
Cons
– Forged 440C, not VG10 Damascus
– Needs honing more often
– No scabbards
Best for: starting a kitchen from scratch on a tight budget.
View the Haru set →Compare the picks
| Knife | Price | Steel | Rating | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Riku VG10 — best value | From £49.99 | VG10 Damascus | 4.89 | Sharpest edge per £ |
| Aiko Black Damascus | From £64.99 | VG10 Damascus | 4.94 | Everyday all-rounder |
| Kiritsuke Ebony | £79.99 | Damascus | 4.69 | Premium look |
| Haru Set (4-piece) | £99.99 | Forged 440C | 4.72 | Complete starter set |
What you give up under £100 (and what you don't)
It's worth being clear about where the money goes once you spend more. Above £100 you start to see premium handle materials like burl wood and abalone, fitted wooden scabbards, higher Damascus layer counts, and steels such as AUS-10. Those are lovely things — but they're refinements, not a different league of sharpness. A well-kept VG10 knife from this list will still glide through a tomato.
What you should not compromise on, even on a budget, is steel quality and a knife that's been ground sharp. That's exactly why a single VG10 blade often beats a cheap multi-piece set: you're paying for the part that does the cutting. If you'd like a wider view of our entry-level chef's knives, our best Japanese chef knife guide is a good next read.
Looking after a budget Japanese knife
A £60 knife that's cared for will outperform a £200 knife that isn't. The rules are simple: hand-wash and dry it straight away (never the dishwasher), use a wooden or plastic board rather than glass or stone, and store it on a magnetic rack or in a block so the edge doesn't knock around in a drawer.
To keep that edge keen, learn to use a whetstone — it's the single biggest upgrade to any knife you already own. Our step-by-step whetstone guide walks you through it, and a combination sharpening stone costs less than the knives on this page.
Frequently asked questions
Can you get a good Japanese knife under £100?
Yes. Under £100 you can buy a real VG10 Damascus knife that hardens to around 60–61 HRC and holds a keen edge far longer than a typical European blade. The savings come from simpler handles and finish, not from worse cutting performance.
Is one good knife or a budget set better value?
If you already own a few basics, a single VG10 knife in the shape you use most gives you the best edge for the money. If you're starting from scratch, a budget forged set like the Haru gets several useful shapes in the drawer for the same price — you can upgrade your most-used knife later.
What's the difference between VG10 Damascus and forged 440C?
VG10 is a high-carbon Japanese stainless with a harder edge (around 60–61 HRC) that stays sharp longer; the Damascus pattern is layered cladding folded around that core. Forged 440C is softer and tougher — easier to re-sharpen but it loses its edge sooner. VG10 cuts keener for longer; 440C is more forgiving and cheaper.
Which single Japanese knife should I buy first?
For most home cooks a santoku or gyuto (chef's knife) is the best first buy, because it handles roughly 80% of everyday prep. The Riku and Aiko both offer those shapes under £100. A kiritsuke is a great choice if you want one striking all-rounder and don't mind a short learning curve.
Are budget Damascus knives just for looks?
No. The Damascus pattern is decorative, but the core steel underneath does the cutting — and in our range that's usually VG10, a genuinely high-performance steel. So you get both the looks and a hard, long-lasting edge, not one at the expense of the other.
Can I put a Japanese knife in the dishwasher?
No — even budget Japanese knives should be hand-washed and dried straight away. Dishwasher heat, detergent and knocking against other items dull and damage the edge and can mark the handle. A quick hand-wash keeps a sub-£100 knife performing for years.
Related guides
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