The Only 3 Kitchen Knives You Actually Need
Most knife sets include knives you will never use. These three handle 95% of kitchen tasks.
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The Big Three
1. Chef's Knife (8-inch)
The workhorse. An 8-inch chef's knife handles 80% of all cutting tasks: chopping vegetables, mincing herbs, slicing meat, crushing garlic, and everything in between.
What to look for:
- 8 inches is the ideal length for home cooks (10-inch is for professionals with large cutting boards)
- Comfortable handle that fits your grip
- A steel you are willing to maintain (stainless for low-maintenance, carbon for performance)
- Weight that feels balanced in your hand (German knives are heavier, Japanese knives are lighter)
For more on this topic, see our guide on Kitchen Knife Steel Types Explained: Carbon, Stainless, and Damascus.
2. Paring Knife (3.5-inch)
The precision tool. A paring knife handles tasks too small or delicate for a chef's knife: peeling fruit, deveining shrimp, trimming fat, cutting strawberry stems, and detailed garnish work.
For more on this topic, see our guide on Best Chef Knives Under $200 for Serious Home Cooks.
What to look for:
- 3 to 3.5 inch blade
- A thin, nimble blade that feels like an extension of your hand
- Do not overspend here. A $15-30 paring knife performs nearly as well as a $100 one because the blade is so small that steel quality differences are less noticeable.
3. Serrated Bread Knife (10-inch)
The specialist. A serrated knife cuts bread without crushing it, slices tomatoes cleanly, and handles anything with a tough exterior and soft interior (crusty bread, citrus, cakes).
What to look for:
- 10 inches for full-size loaves
- Pointed serrations (not scalloped)
- Cannot be resharpened effectively, so buy a reasonably priced one and replace it when it dulls (every 3-5 years with regular use)
What You Do NOT Need
- Santoku (redundant if you have a chef's knife)
- Utility knife (redundant if you have a chef's and paring knife)
- Carving knife (the chef's knife handles this)
- Steak knives with serrations (sharp, straight-edge steak knives are superior)
Related Guides: Wondering how much to spend on your primary chef's knife? Read our detailed analysis on are expensive kitchen knives worth it. Learn other essentials in how to choose your first chef knife and how to care for them in our complete knife sharpening guide.

Marcus Chen
Editor & Lead Reviewer
Marcus Chen is the editor of KitchenwareAuthority.com. He writes about kitchen tools, cookware, and cooking techniques based on hands-on testing and research. Every product recommendation on this site has been evaluated through real-world kitchen use.
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