
The Best Japanese Knives for Cutting Chicken & Poultry (UK 2026)
Jump to
Updated July 2026 · 7 min read · UK Japanese knife specialists
If you cook a lot of chicken, the single knife that changes everything is a boning knife — a narrow, nimble blade that slips between meat, skin and bone. For jointing a whole bird, removing thighs and breasts, or spatchcocking for the oven, a boning knife does in seconds what a big chef's knife fights with. Pair it with one all-round gyuto (Japanese chef's knife) for portioning cooked meat and slicing, and you have chicken covered.
Below are our top Japanese knives for poultry, all in stock in the UK, with real prices and honest pros and cons. The short version: for most home cooks the Haruta 6" Boning Knife is the best all-round choice.
Key takeaway
A 6" Japanese boning knife handles jointing, deboning and spatchcocking; add an 8" gyuto for portioning and you rarely need anything else for chicken.
How to choose a knife for chicken and poultry
Three things matter far more than brand or looks when you're cutting poultry.
Blade shape and flex. A boning knife is narrow and comes to a fine point, so you can steer it around a joint and follow the bone. Japanese boning knives (sometimes labelled honesuki in style) tend to be stiffer than a European filleting knife — that stiffness gives you control when you push through cartilage and pop a joint, which is exactly what jointing a chicken needs. A little flex helps when you're skimming a breast off the bone; a lot of flex is really for filleting fish.
Steel and edge. Every knife here is high-carbon stainless — VG10 at roughly 60–61 HRC. That hardness holds a keen edge through a lot of skin and sinew, which is where blunt knives slip and cause accidents. It's stainless, so it won't react with raw meat or acidic marinades, and it wipes clean.
Keep it off bone — mostly. Hard Japanese steel takes a thinner, sharper edge than a Western knife, and the trade-off is that it can chip if you hack straight through a thick bone. You joint around bones and through soft cartilage, not through them. For splitting a bird down the backbone, kitchen shears or a heavier Western cleaver are the safer tool. Used the right way, a Japanese boning knife will outlast and out-cut anything in the drawer.
One honest note: the store does not stock a traditional single-bevel Japanese butchery blade, and you don't need one. Every knife below is double-bevel, so it suits left- and right-handers alike and is far more forgiving to sharpen. For heavy, repeated bone work — think splitting whole carcasses — a dedicated butcher's knife is a better fit.
The best Japanese knives for chicken & poultry
★★★★★ 4.87 (110 reviews)
Pros
✓ Narrow, pointed blade steers around every joint
✓ VG10 holds its edge through skin and sinew
✓ Comes with a wooden scabbard for safe storage
Cons
– Specialist shape, not your everyday veg knife
– Keep it off thick bone to protect the edge
Best for: anyone who regularly buys whole chickens, jointing, deboning thighs and spatchcocking. This is the knife we'd hand a home cook first — the shape does the work.
★★★★★ 4.87 (110 reviews)
Pros
✓ Long edge portions cooked chicken cleanly
✓ Does everything else in the kitchen too
✓ The one knife to own if you buy just one
Cons
– Too big to steer around small joints
– Not a substitute for a boning knife on raw birds
Best for: carving a roast chicken, portioning cooked meat, and every other kitchen task. Pair it with the boning knife and you're set.
★★★★★ 4.9 (143 reviews)
Pros
✓ Beautifully finished with a premium handle
✓ Same nimble boning shape, our highest rating
✓ A knife you'll enjoy picking up
Cons
– Costs a little more than the Haruta
– The upgrade is finish, not extra performance
Best for: the cook who wants the best-finished boning knife and treats good tools as a pleasure, not just a job.
★★★★★ 4.89 (62 reviews)
Pros
✓ The lowest-priced VG10 boning knife here
✓ Same 67-layer Damascus VG10 core
✓ Part of a range you can build out later
Cons
– Simpler finish than the Haruta or Chikashi
– No scabbard included
Best for: the best-value way into a proper Japanese boning knife. Choose the 6" Boning option on the product page.
The three poultry jobs — and the knife for each

1. Jointing a whole bird
This is where a boning knife earns its keep. Pull the leg away from the body to find the joint, run the tip along the seam of the skin, then pop the hip joint and cut through. Do the same at the wing. The narrow blade lets you feel your way around the ball-and-socket rather than sawing blindly. A chef's knife can do it, but it's clumsy and you'll end up cutting through bone you didn't mean to.
2. Deboning thighs and breasts
Boneless thighs cost a premium at the supermarket, so this is the job that pays for the knife. Lay the thigh skin-side down, run the tip along either side of the bone, and lift it out. For a breast, keep the edge angled against the ribcage and let the blade follow the bone. A keen VG10 edge glides here; a blunt knife tears the meat and wastes it.
3. Spatchcocking and portioning
To spatchcock, remove the backbone so the bird lies flat for faster, more even roasting. Kitchen shears are honestly the easiest tool for cutting through the backbone itself — then use the boning knife to open out the bird and trim. Once it's cooked, switch to the gyuto: its longer edge portions a roast chicken into clean pieces in one or two strokes, without shredding.
Quick comparison
| Knife | Price | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Haruta 6" Boning — best overall | £79.99 | Jointing, deboning, spatchcocking |
| Haruta 8" Gyuto | £89.99 | Portioning & carving cooked chicken |
| Chikashi 6" Boning | £91.99 | Premium finish, highest rated |
| Riku 6" Boning — best value | £69.99 | Lowest-cost VG10 boning knife |
| Aiko Black Damascus (from) | £64.99 | Buildable range, add a boning knife later |
Looking after your knife
Raw poultry is hard on a blade only if you leave it wet. Wash by hand and dry straight away — never the dishwasher — and store it in its scabbard or on a magnetic rack rather than loose in a drawer. Hone or steel it regularly, and give it a proper edge on a whetstone a couple of times a year. Our full Japanese knife care guide walks through it. Look after a VG10 blade and it will stay chicken-ready for decades.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best knife for cutting up a whole chicken?
A boning knife. Its narrow, pointed blade lets you steer around the joints and follow the bone to separate legs, wings and breasts cleanly. Our pick is the Haruta 6" VG10 Boning Knife (£79.99). Use kitchen shears for cutting through the backbone.
Can I use a santoku or chef's knife for chicken?
Yes, for portioning cooked chicken and general prep an 8" gyuto or a santoku works well. For raw jointing and deboning, though, a boning knife is far easier and safer because the narrow blade fits around the joints.
Will a Japanese knife chip on chicken bone?
Only if you chop straight through thick bone. Hard VG10 steel takes a thin, keen edge, so you joint around bones and through soft cartilage. For splitting a carcass, use shears or a heavier Western cleaver instead.
Do I need a flexible boning knife for chicken?
Not especially. A stiffer boning blade gives more control for popping poultry joints and works well for deboning thighs. Lots of flex is mainly useful for filleting fish, where you skim along the ribs.
Is it cheaper to debone chicken yourself?
Usually, yes. Whole chickens and bone-in thighs cost much less per kilo than boneless or pre-jointed cuts. A boning knife pays for itself quickly if you cook chicken often — and you get the carcass for stock.
How do I keep the edge sharp after cutting poultry?
Hand-wash and dry the knife straight after use, hone it regularly, and sharpen it on a whetstone once or twice a year. Avoid the dishwasher and don't cut on stone, glass or metal boards.
Related guides
Ready to make light work of chicken? Browse our single Japanese knives.
Shop single knives →