Guide · 6 min read
The best knife sheath for every knife type
The right knife sheath is the one that matches your blade's length and height — both, not just length. A sheath that's too short leaves the edge exposed; too shallow and the spine won't seat; too loose and the knife slips out. The table below maps common kitchen knives to the size that fits.
Knife sheath size by knife type
| Size | Max blade length | Max blade height | Fits these knives |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small (16 cm) | 150 mm | 28 mm | Paring, petty, utility |
| Medium (22 cm) | 200 mm | 45 mm | Santoku, nakiri, 8" chef |
| Large (27 cm) | 255 mm | 50 mm | Long gyuto, slicer, 10" chef |
Measure the blade only — from the tip to where the handle begins — and the height at the tallest point, spine to edge.
By knife type
Paring & petty knives (75–150 mm): small, narrow blades. A Small sheath fits paring, petty, and most utility knives.
Santoku & nakiri (160–180 mm): the tall, flat profile of a nakiri makes height the limiting measurement, not length. A Medium sheath covers both, along with most 8-inch chef's knives.
Chef's knives & gyuto (200–240 mm): an 8-inch (200 mm) chef's knife fits a Medium; a 9.5–10-inch (240–250 mm) gyuto needs a Large.
Slicers, sujihiki & long gyuto (250 mm+): long, lean blades take the Large sheath. Very long yanagiba and brisket slicers can exceed standard sheath lengths — measure first.
What to avoid in a knife sheath
- A loose fit. If the knife rattles or slides out when inverted, the sheath is too big — it protects nothing in a moving bag.
- Edge contact. A good sheath grips the spine and bevel and holds the edge clear of the inner wall. Pressure on the cutting edge dulls it.
- Abrasive interiors. Rough or gritty liners scratch the blade. Honoki wood and smooth moulded interiors are safe; cheap flocked guards can trap grit.
Sheath materials compared
| Material | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Honoki wood (traditional) | Kind to steel; beautiful; breathable | Expensive; made to one blade; absorbs moisture |
| Leather | Handsome; durable | Can hold moisture against the edge; needs care |
| Plain plastic guard | Cheap; light | Purely functional; flimsy clips; no character |
| Textured ABS (modern saya) | Durable; friction-fit; customisable; affordable | Sized to a class of blade, not one knife |
Our recommendation
For most cooks, a textured ABS saya is the best balance of protection, price, and looks — the edge protection of a guard with the character of bespoke work. Sayabi sayas come in the three sizes above, in twelve designs, with free UK delivery and a full Fit Guide if you're between sizes. Carrying more than one blade? The three-piece bundle saves £18.
Common questions
- What sheath fits an 8-inch chef's knife?
- An 8-inch (200 mm) chef's knife fits a Medium sheath, which takes blades up to 200 mm long and 45 mm tall.
- How do I measure my knife for a sheath?
- Measure the blade length from the tip to the start of the handle, and the blade height at its tallest point (spine to edge). Match both to the table above — height is often the limiting figure on tall knives like nakiri.
- Is a knife guard the same as a saya?
- Yes — “knife guard,” “edge guard,” and “saya” all describe a sheath that covers a knife's edge. See what is a saya for the difference in origin and material.
Keep reading
- What is a saya?A saya is the traditional Japanese sheath for a kitchen knife — a friction-fit cover that protects the blade's edge. Here's where they come from, what they're made of, and whether you need one.
- Best gifts for chefs: an honest UK guideThe best gift for a chef is something they use daily but would not buy themselves. An honest UK roundup with price bands, who each suits, and where a custom saya fits.
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