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Safety Guide

How to Open and Close a Pocket Knife Safely

A controlled, repeatable routine for opening and closing folding knives across thumb stud, flipper, thumb hole, and assisted-opening mechanisms.

Written by William • Updated June 2026 • 5 min read

Most folding knife injuries happen during the opening or closing motion rather than during cutting itself, usually from rushing the motion or losing track of where fingers are relative to the blade's swing path. The mechanism varies by knife, but the safety principles are the same across all of them.

  1. 1

    Identify your knife's opening mechanism

    A thumb stud requires pushing a small post outward with the thumb. A flipper tab requires pressing a small lever near the pivot, which swings the blade out as part of the motion. A thumb hole (Spyderco's signature design) requires hooking a thumb through the hole and rotating the blade out. Assisted-opening knives need only a small initial push before an internal spring completes the motion.

  2. 2

    Use a controlled grip and motion to open

    Grip the handle firmly with all fingers clear of the blade's swing path before beginning the opening motion. Apply deliberate, steady pressure rather than an aggressive flicking motion — a controlled open is no slower in practice and significantly reduces the risk of losing control of the blade mid-motion.

    A note on flicking: Aggressively flicking a knife open is sometimes restricted or scrutinized differently under local law depending on how the opening action is classified, separate from whether the mechanism itself is manual, assisted, or automatic. A controlled, deliberate open avoids this ambiguity entirely.
  3. 3

    Confirm the lock is fully engaged

    Before using the knife for any task, check for blade play by applying light pressure to the spine and confirming there is no wobble or give. A lock that has not fully engaged is the most common cause of unexpected blade closure during use.

  4. 4

    Disengage the lock fully before closing

    Each lock type has a specific release point: the AXIS lock's sliding bar, a frame lock's cutout in the handle scale, a liner lock's tab, or a lockback's release point near the rear of the handle. Slipjoints have no lock to disengage — just controlled spring tension. Identify and fully disengage the correct release before applying any folding pressure.

    Full lock comparison guideRelease points for every major lock type
    Read Guide →
  5. 5

    Control the blade through the closing motion

    Fold the blade closed with steady, even pressure, keeping fingers clear of the path the edge travels as it rotates into the handle. Never let the blade snap closed under spring tension or gravity alone — maintain control through the entire motion until the blade is fully seated in the closed position.

  6. 6

    Store the knife closed when not in use

    Always store, carry, and hand a folding knife to another person in the closed position. This applies regardless of lock type or how confident the lock feels — it removes any risk of accidental contact with an exposed edge.

Two-Hand vs. One-Hand Closing by Lock Type

Lock TypeClosing MethodExample Knife
AXIS LockOne-hand (slide lock bar back)Benchmade Bugout
Compression LockOne-hand (push lock bar aside)Spyderco Para 3
Frame LockOne-hand (push lock bar with thumb)CRKT Drifter
Liner LockOne-hand (push liner aside)Civivi Elementum
Lockback / Tri-AdTwo-hand (press release, fold blade)Buck 110, Cold Steel Recon 1
SlipjointTwo-hand (control spring tension while folding)Case Stockman, Opinel No. 8

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the safest way to close a folding knife?
Keep fingers clear of the cutting edge at all times, disengage the lock fully before applying any closing pressure, and fold the blade closed with controlled, deliberate motion rather than letting it snap shut under spring tension or gravity.
Do all folding knives need two hands to close?
No. Knives with an AXIS lock, Compression Lock, or frame lock can typically be closed one-handed by disengaging the lock with the same hand holding the knife. Lockbacks and slipjoints generally require two hands — one to hold the handle steady and one to release the lock or fold the blade.
Is it safe to flick a knife open quickly?
A controlled, deliberate opening motion is safer than an aggressive flicking motion, regardless of opening mechanism. Aggressive flicking increases the chance of an incomplete lock engagement or loss of control of the blade during the opening motion, and may also be restricted under certain local knife laws depending on how the action is classified.
How do you safely open an assisted-opening knife?
Apply light, deliberate pressure to the flipper tab or thumb stud to begin the motion, then let the internal spring complete the opening rather than forcing it. Keep fingers and the supporting hand clear of the blade's swing path throughout the motion.