Steel marketing on knife packaging tends to either oversell budget steels or bury premium steels in alphanumeric codes that mean nothing without context. Every pocket knife steel is a tradeoff between three properties: edge retention (how long it stays sharp), toughness (resistance to chipping and breaking), and corrosion resistance (resistance to rust and staining). No steel maximizes all three — understanding the tradeoff is more useful than chasing a single "best" steel.
The Three Properties That Matter
| Property | What It Means | Why It Trades Off |
|---|---|---|
| Edge Retention | How long the blade stays sharp under use | Usually requires higher carbide content, which reduces toughness |
| Toughness | Resistance to chipping, cracking, or breaking under stress | Higher toughness often means softer steel that dulls faster |
| Corrosion Resistance | Resistance to rust and staining from moisture | Higher chromium content for corrosion resistance can reduce edge retention |
Common Steels by Price Tier
Budget tier (knives under $40)
8Cr13MoV is the most common budget stainless steel, found on knives like the CRKT Drifter. It has good corrosion resistance and sharpens easily with basic equipment, but its edge retention under repeated cutting tasks falls well short of premium powder-metallurgy steels. 420HC, used by Buck with a proprietary heat treatment, performs above its budget classification when properly treated, taking a fine edge and resharpening easily.
Mid tier ($40–$100)
D2 tool steel, found on the Civivi Elementum, offers a meaningful step up in edge retention over 8Cr13MoV. It is technically semi-stainless (around 12% chromium, just under the 13% threshold for true stainless classification), so it requires more attention to drying and cleaning than fully stainless options to avoid surface staining. Sandvik 14C28N, a Swedish stainless steel used on the Kershaw Leek, balances good corrosion resistance with reasonable edge retention and easy sharpening.
Premium tier ($100+)
CPM-S30V, used on the Benchmade Bugout and Griptilian, is a powder-metallurgy steel purpose-built for cutlery, balancing edge retention, toughness, and corrosion resistance better than most production alternatives. CPM-S35VN adds niobium for improved toughness, making it a common choice for harder-use folders like the Cold Steel Recon 1. CPM-S45VN, used on the Spyderco Para 3, refines S30V/S35VN further with improved corrosion resistance, well suited to humid or marine environments.
Traditional carbon steel
Carbon steel, used on the standard Opinel No. 8, takes the sharpest possible edge of any common knife steel due to its simple grain structure. It offers essentially no corrosion resistance on its own, requiring the blade to be wiped dry after wet use and periodically oiled to prevent rust. Woodworkers and whittlers often prefer it specifically for the edge quality, accepting the maintenance tradeoff.
Steel Comparison at a Glance
| Steel | Tier | Edge Retention | Corrosion Resistance | Ease of Sharpening |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8Cr13MoV | Budget | Fair | Good | Easy |
| 420HC | Budget | Fair–Good | Good | Easy |
| Carbon Steel (XC90) | Traditional | Good | Poor (requires care) | Very Easy |
| 14C28N | Mid | Good | Very Good | Easy |
| D2 | Mid | Very Good | Fair (semi-stainless) | Moderate |
| CPM-S30V | Premium | Very Good | Very Good | Moderate |
| CPM-S35VN | Premium | Very Good | Very Good | Moderate |
| CPM-S45VN | Premium | Very Good | Excellent | Moderate |