






🔪 Slice like a pro, chop like a boss — the cleaver that means business.
The Babish 6.5-Inch Forged Cleaver Knife is crafted from premium high-carbon 1.4116 German steel with a Rockwell hardness of 55±2, delivering exceptional sharpness and edge retention. Its full-tang forged blade and double-bolstered handle provide superior balance and durability, making it ideal for heavy-duty chopping of meat, poultry, and fish. Polished to a precise 13° cutting edge, this cleaver combines professional-grade performance with ergonomic design, perfect for both everyday kitchen tasks and serious culinary projects.








| Best Sellers Rank | #2,663 in Kitchen & Dining ( See Top 100 in Kitchen & Dining ) #52 in Meat Cleavers |
| Blade Edge | Plain, Serrated |
| Blade Length | 6.5 Inches |
| Blade Material | High Carbon Stainless Steel , High Carbon Steel |
| Brand | Babish |
| Color | Cleaver - High Carbon Stainless |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 out of 5 stars 10,241 Reviews |
| Handle Material | Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene , Plastic |
T**M
High value, great geometry, room for growth. Get a sharpener!
I'm a bit of a knife nerd. I'm not gonna be that guy that lists all my knives, but suffice to say this is on the board with some pretty premium cutlery. Here's why I adore this thing: Oh, quick note before starting. Get a sharpener. No kitchen knife stays sharp forever and a sharp knife makes a world of difference. Remember, at the end of the day all a premium knife does is stay sharp longer. If you just get good at sharpening this could be end game. I recommend the King double sided whetstone, and watch the Adam Ragusea sharpening video. And practice! Alright, why I love this knife! - Room For Growth Even if you upgrade later, this can stay in your collection to ram through joints or hammer through a hard squash when you'd feel bad doing that with your other knives. Or when you just want to do a quick task and put the knife in the dishwasher, you can! No exotic wood handle to shrink or high carbon steel to discolor! - Serious Geometry: This knife is well balanced and it feels great in the hand. There's no heal (where the bolster extends all the way down to the back of the blade) so you can easily sharpen the whole thing with a single whetstone. - Guest-Proof It lives on the magnet board next all my others. When guests come over who don't know how to treat a knife I can hand them this! It doesn't feel like an insult because it's still a serious knife and I keep it razor sharp so it performs beautifully. But then I can watch them cut a sandwich directly on a stoneware plate without even one tear rolling down my cheek! Just chuck it in the washer, sharpen again, and back it goes. - Excellent Durability It's a soft steel so it doesn't chip and it sharpens easily. Bit of a plus or minus here, but if you have a real knife like this you should also have a sharpener. There's really no task this thing can't do.
B**O
Very High Quality, Dramatically Low Price
By Bill Marsano, independent product tester and home cook. Anyone interested in value for money should consider this knife for its high quality, Japanese style (although it’s made in China) and impressively low price. I bought one for myself and another, later, as a gift. Both arrived very sharp out of the box and have stood up well to use by conscientious home cooks. (I have since bought and been pleased by Babish’s “Clef” and Santoku.) All are made from 1.4116 stainless steel, one of the cutlery industry's standard steels because of its stain-resistance, durability and ease of cleaning and honing. Edge retention is very good—treated well, the knives will stay sharp far longer that ‘bargain’ blades made of softer steel. Please note: a couple of fear-mongering reviews claim that the knife is dangerous because it is so sharp and has no bolster. This is ignorant nonsense. First, if you have used only very dull knives, you will need to go slowly with this or any other sharp knife. Second, the heel (back end) of the blade is perpendicular to the cutting edge, so your hand cannot slide forward onto the cutting edge--period. Bolsters may aid balance or be relics of earlier forging technology, but they are in no way safety features. No Japanese knives have bolsters because they interfere with sharpening and prevent use of the pull-cut technique. (Zwilling, Wusthof and other leading brands offer both bolster and no-bolster models). To keep your knife sharp, use a “steel” or “butcher’s steel” (a.k.a. “honing rod”). A good steel (not ceramic or diamond-coated but all steel) will cost more than the knife (See Amazon’s 12” Zwillings) but will save many times its cost (and inconvenience) in professional sharpening. Learn to use it from your butcher and some online videos, and use it OFTEN.—Mr. Marsano steels his knives after every use. None has ever been sharpened and some are a decade old. He uses only no-bolster knives and still has all the fingers he was born with.
Q**T
Cheap Bread Knife - Here's my professional opinion on it
I just moved into a new home and am replacing the essentials that my old roommate used to own. Obviously, for anyone who cooks at home, you need a few decent knives. Now, my background and current job is working in bars/restaurants. I work on the bar side of things, but have definitely been around commercial kitchens where cooks come in with their daily-driver types of knives. Sure, you have high end restaurants / chefs who own and use $300+ knives (cost per knife), but for most people working in kitchens, they're looking for affordable, good quality knives they can use daily. This knife seems to fit that bill. Granted, it's a serrated bread knife, so it has limited uses. Personally, at home, I'm never slicing bread. All the bread I purchase comes pre-sliced unless you're talking about kaiser rolls or sub style buns. But, my primary use for a bread knife at home is slicing fragile fruits and vegetables like tomatoes and citrus, and cutting sandwiches in half. At my bar we've been using the same restaurant supply store brand serrated knife to prep our bar fruit for 5 years. It was probably a $10 knife at the very most. It still works well, and it has definitely seen a ton of use. Never sharpened once. So, for myself at home, I wanted to buy a good quality bread knife that wouldn't break the bank. I didn't want to go cheap like $10, but didn't want to spend over $50 either. I saw this on Amazon and it fit the bill and had good reviews, so I ordered it. I really love how this knife feels. Great weight balance, and feels quality. It came out of the box super sharp, and I've had a chance to test drive it on slicing tomatoes for sandwiches, and it's super accurate. You can go paper thin if you wanted, and it won't "warble" and start going sideways like some poor quality serrated knives can do. I then made a sandwich and cut it in half. It cut through all of the meat, veggies, and bread like butter. Seriously, like two passes and the sandwich was perfectly cut with nothing dangling and hanging on, it was like a laser cut. I did a bit of research after buying this knife, and saw some reviews out there saying Babish knives will lose their edge fast. That's fine by me, that will happen to any knife, that's why there are wetstones and sharpeners out there, so that's not a,n issue for me. Also, I want to note that I didn't know who Babish was before buying this knife, so I'm not purchasing this as a fanboy or anything. I bought it purely on the price, design and reviews. The reality is, is that you can buy a whole knife set with a wood block for about $50-$80. So, spending $24 on just one knife might seem dumb. But, for 99.9% of home cooking you only need a few knives. A good santoku, a bread knife, and arguably some decent steak knives (depending if you serve your steak pre-cut or not). Those entire knife sets come with about 8 knives you'll probably never need to use, and trying to save a few bucks by buying the whole set will compromise the quality of all the knives. All that being said, I'm happy with my purchase. I also bought the santoku knife this brand offers. Again, I don't mind sharpening knives. I've done it A LOT. If, for whatever reason, these knives can't hold an edge for like a week of general use over time (like some other reviews online say), I'll probably come back here an update my review. But, I just don't see it happening based on the quality of materials used and my week's worth of use on it so far. Are there better knives out there? Of course. Do you really need them as a home cook? Probably not. If you're on a budget and just want a few good knives, I would recommend this brand for sure.
K**.
Great Knife
This is the best knife for your money!! The handle has a good weight to it and feels sturdy and the knife is super sharp! I love it!
P**L
So far seems like a great knife - especially at the price point.
I just got this knife several days ago - my review is based on initial use and not longevity (how well it holds an edge and how long it holds up). Also I mention this up front - don't put your cutlery into the dishwasher unless you don't value your cutlery or have oodles of spare scratch to just replace knives instead of caring for them. Out of the box it's sharp, feels nice in my hand - well balanced and a nice handle. So far I've used it to; top and split two lbs of Red Fresno peppers for fermenting - diced two large onions, a bulb of garlic, full stalk of celery for a roast - also some green onions and a big handful of chives. The knife performed very well and for that I DO recommend this knife. Two observations from my first uses - one being it's not "stick-proof" meaning yes, the veggies still stick to the knife while dicing, two being it's 6.5" in length which is a bit short for me and I think I would prefer an 8" Santoku. At this price point you cannot go wrong if you are looking to get into a Santoku style knife. There are a LOT of these type of knives on the market and many of them are really expensive. So again I do recommend this knife - even with it being short for my liking.
D**.
Best knife for the price.
Really great knife, super sharp and it retains the edge really well too. It is super comfortable and with the super sharp tip is very precise. The length and size is just perfect, and is perfectly balance where the handle meets the blade. Fantastic for the price.
M**E
Great Knives Without Spending a Fortune!
Great knife set! I have followed Andrew (Babish) for years and I just recently started a job in a kitchen and decided I’d like to get myself a knife kit started. But, they’re all so expensive! Not this set though! $20/knife and a roll bag to go with it!? The other chefs at work also like the look and feel of the knives and were also surprised when I told them I only spent $60! Extremely sharp right off the bat! So be careful there! I brought them home and cleaned them after work and it looks like I haven’t even used them! Very easy to clean. Very comfortable handgrips as well and the size is perfect. Functions very well and compares very closely to our dalstrong knives!
P**A
Perfect little knife
This knife is wonderfully sharp and extremely useful for everything from removing potato eyes to making precise cuts of veggies.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
2 weeks ago