






🔪 Own the edge that never quits — your ultimate heavy-duty sidekick.
The Hultafors 380020 GK Heavy Duty Knife is a robust 8.7-inch fixed blade crafted from high-carbon Japanese steel hardened to 58-60 HRC. Featuring a double bevel edge honed on a leather strop, it delivers exceptional sharpness and durability. Its ergonomic polypropylene handle and versatile holster, attachable to both belt and button, make it a reliable tool for professionals demanding power and convenience in tough environments.
| ASIN | B004O9MIE4 |
| Age Range (Description) | Adult |
| Age Range Description | Adult |
| Best Sellers Rank | #468,569 in Sports & Outdoors ( See Top 100 in Sports & Outdoors ) #833 in Camping Fixed-Blade Knives |
| Blade Edge | Compound Bevel |
| Blade Length | 3 Millimeters |
| Blade Material | High Carbon Steel |
| Blade Shape | Drop Point |
| Brand | Hultafors |
| Brand Name | Hultafors |
| Color | multicolor |
| Customer Package Type | Standard Packaging |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 726 Reviews |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 07317843800210 |
| Hand Orientation | Ambidextrous |
| Handle Material | Plastic, Polypropylene (PP) |
| Included Components | Heavy Duty Knife |
| Is Product Cordless | No |
| Item Length | 8.7 Inches |
| Item Type Name | Heavy Duty Knife "GK" |
| Item Weight | 5.44 ounces |
| Manufacturer | Hultafors |
| Model Name | GK |
| Model Number | 380020 |
| Part Number | 380020 |
| Product Care Instructions | Hand Wash Only |
| Recommended Uses For Product | Carving |
| Reusability | Reusable |
| Size | 0.1" |
| Special Feature | Heavy Duty,Durable |
| Special Features | Heavy Duty,Durable |
| Style | Modern |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 1 Year |
B**R
Built Like a Viking Axe in Knife Form – My Daily Beater That Refuses to Die
This Hultafors GK Heavy Duty Knife is my everyday carry, and it’s been through absolute chaos with me — and somehow still looks like it could cut through a truck tire without blinking. If knives had personalities, this one would wear flannel, grow its own beard, and chop wood for fun. The build quality is seriously impressive. It's got that classic "overbuilt Swedish tool" vibe — thick spine, solid tang, and zero wobble or cheap plastic nonsense. You hold it and immediately think, “Yep, this could survive the apocalypse.” As for feel, it fits in the hand like it was designed by someone who actually uses knives. The handle’s grippy without being sticky, chunky without being a brick. It feels comfortable in all weather — even when your hands are cold, wet, or covered in mystery goop. No weird hotspots, just a good solid grip that makes you want to go chop something. Size-wise, it’s just right — not so big it feels like a machete, not so small you feel like you’re cutting twine with a butter knife. It’s got just enough heft to make you feel like you're in charge, but still nimble enough for everyday tasks. Functionality? Off the charts. I’ve used it to baton wood, scrape, pry open stubborn crates, trim rope, and probably cut stuff it wasn’t technically designed to cut. Still sharp. Still solid. Still going strong. The holster even deserves a shout-out — clips to your belt or work pants like a loyal sidekick. It doesn’t fall off, doesn’t jab you in the side, and doesn’t act like it’s made out of brittle dollar-store plastic. All in all, if you’re looking for a no-nonsense knife that can take a daily beating, laugh it off, and ask for more — this is it. Forget babying it — this knife wants to work. Buy it, beat it up, and then recommend it to everyone you know, just like I did.
R**R
Best knife under $20
I bought this knife as a spare and to have another knife with a scandi grind. I have to say that I am impressed. It came sharp. Hair shaving no hair splitting sharp. The slight secondary bevel was polished making me think that it was stropped. The spine showed signs of the blade being pressed out from the steel. Since I will use this with a ferro rod around my forge and campfires, I took time to square it up a little more. It threw sparks without doing this but not very well. I took it out to the forge and grabbed a piece of oak limb and made a small one stick fire. I batoned it through the oak and then made some feather shavings. I lit them with a ferro rod using the spine of the knife. The blade is high carbon steel and has more belly at the tip than a mora which means it would make an okay blade for skinning. Maybe not as a primary but as a bakup to a skinning knife. With the way it holds an edge and it's all round usefullness I'll probably take it with me hunting since it is light to carry. It handled all tasks with ease and remained hair shaving sharp. I really like the plastic handle of the knife. It is the best plastic handle I've found on any knife. I find it easy to use in the forehand grip with no hot spots while carving and even doing some heavier cutting. It also feels good in the hand when doing chest lever cuts. The grip shape is comfortable and allows a good firm grip. I already want a couple more of these. Many have said they don't like the sheath attachment. I rather do. I found that I could use it on the buttons of my BDU style pants pocket buttons. I don't carry a knife there but it was handy while playing around in shop. Kind of a drop leg knife position. However, my intent was and is to use the knife with a neck carry. I just ran a piece of 550 cord through the handle and locked it down. Then I used a cord lock from a worn out jacked and I have easy adjustment and it breaks free with some effort so there's no worry of chocking myself if it gets caught. You can see that set up in the photo. For belt carry you need to cut the tab off the sheath that protrudes into the button hole as suggested in the directions. I haven't and don't intend to since this is a neck knife and the tab locks the 550 cord in place. After a couple days of use this knife is quickly becoming a favorite and I will likely buy a couple more to keep in the shop and with each of several kits I have. I think I'll put one on my electricians belt as a knife comes in handy for cutting romex sheathing. Then one in my car kit, bob etc... For an inexpensive knife it is hard to beat. For less than $15 it's easy to buy several. I like it better than moras so I'd say it's the best buy of knives under $20
T**M
Great for the money.
I bought this and a Morakniv Robust to compare as my new camp knife. Wanted something durable and lightweight. Both appear to be great knives, especially for the money. The Hultafors is about 1 ounce heavier (with sheath), which may make it feel slightly more rugged than the Mora but not by much. The Hultafors blade is slightly longer and the handle as well. So if you have large paws you might like it a little more. The Mora's handle is a little more grippy though, the Hultafors wants to slide around a bit more in hand. The Mora is a true scandi grind which gives it a nicer cutting edge, the Hultafors has a secondary bevel which while not as nice would probably stand up to more abuse depending on your use. The sheaths go both ways too. The Mora sheath seems a little more rugged and the belt clip attachment is easier and seems more substantial and be clipped on a belt or just the waitband or really just about anything, but the retention is lack luster. The Hultafors sheaths attachment seems weak. It wouldn't attach to my belt because of the thickness, which really isn't that thick. It might be a better lock up than the Mora's if you find a belt thin enough. However the Hultafors sheath did have better knife retention. Personally I prefer the Mora for a few dollars more. Just seemed a little more refined and as an all around camp knife I like the edge more. However for the price the Hultafors is a tank. With a few mods I think it would be great.
T**T
Hult Heavy Big Greeny
The Hultafors Heavy is a very light weight knife with japanese 1080 carbon steel blade and three fourths partial tang in a solid polymer handle. The 3.75 long x .125 inch wide blade can be seen going through its paces on youtube. The tip of the blade is thick and does not have the typical mora bevel. The blade is stainless which will decrease maintanance and oiling. The green handle is solid and extends the hand guard for better hand and finger protection. The rear of the hand guard also has a taper for extraction in blade wedge situations. The knife is inexpensive light weight and best of all, can be modified. The blade can be blued, and the green handle can be dimpled with a soldering iron, the plastic pommel can be drilled 1/4" from the end, with only proper safety measures, and a paracord lanyard can be attached. The sheath is similar to the swiss mora sheaths, but it is unique in that it is wide enough to attach to molle webbing. The black plastic sheath has a drainage hole. The hultafor heavy has a remarkably tough and durable blade for the cost. It is a good option as a bush craft, fishing and work knife that can be easily modified. The tang on this knife has been viewed by radiograph, whereby images are available. The Hultafor heavy seems to to have the edge on the Mora Robust and Heavy Companion. The blade width and tip bevel as to resist bending or cracking when prying with the beefier handguard seem to favor the Hultafor. As a cost efficient light weight military task knife that can be mounted on molle gear, the Hultafor works, but it would need some adaptions for sheath retention given the activity and environment. Perhaps a snap or velcro retention strap or even an expensive fifty dollar kydex sheath. The Hultafor does not replace a full wang Companion, but it does not have the cost and weight associated with a premium edged escort. The Hulatfor Heavy is a green cutting machine, which would make any chef, cook or butcher proud to push into into the cheapest meat or poultry. Don't even ask about performance when butter or cheese is involved. This knife is capable of battoning through a hundred wheels of amish swiss stacked to the barns ceiling. The curvature of the blade seems to be designed by a rocket scientist when tasked with spreading peanut butter on a flimsy saltine cracker. Goes right on with one swipe without the slightest of crumbling. Imagine this knife carefully scrapping nail polish off your significant others townails, or even in the emergency tool box on the international space station. Can't get out of your sleeping bag while weightless in zero gravity, grab your hultafors and slice the zipper out. Need an extraction tool to bust out the side wind of your Caddilac CTS, just drill a vertical hole in the pommel and epoxy a phillips head bit. This knife would easily puncture a gas tank, or even cut through one of those skinny racing bicycle tires, remember the song by Queen. Freddy would have had a Hultafors for slicing pumpkin pie and buttering and dicing cucumbers and carrots for a three layer salad with calamari. Need a deep sea fishing knife, then get a haltafors and soak it in WD40 or balistol well. Carbon steel with 58 to 60 rockwell hardness tempered from a molten steel furnace somewhere around Fufashima, just keep the salt washed off and wipe it down with a little olive oil and you could cut prime fillets from Godzilla and the Lok Ness Monster. For big game, you need to wrap your hands around a big handle, and that's where the Hult sucedes, where others wimp out and shirk to the little fingers curled around their skinny little shanks of rusty dullness. Grandma always liked to chop her meat with a big fat knife, perhaps a little neanderthal DNA left over from the stone age, but she never used a little pairing knife when caning pickled pigs feet and hog malls and other tasty parts from the far side of the pork bellies. Granny used an old hickory back then, and she had the scars to show for every time she slipped and cut a finger. Times were tough during the great depression, and the knives and grandmas were even tougher. Not much has changed during the great recession, but at least this knife has the approval of many modern grannies, who use this hulkster green knife to prepare sushi, tofu and chop weiners for the baked beans. The mystery carbon steel is shiny and reflects the last rays of the setting sun. Get one before they introduce a stainless steel version with a pink handle.....
J**F
Mora Alternative
If you are into Mora knives, you might want to check out Hultafors, especially this one. Its twice the thickness of most Mora knives with a wider more stout blade. I realize that Mora has some sturdier knives as well, like the black and the High Q Robust, and I own those as well. I'm just saying this is a great alternative. While most of the Mora knives are geared towards finer tasks, this thing, is an absolute beast. I can do more delicate tasks with it, and then turn around and beat the hell out of it without ANY fear of it breaking. And if it does break.....its pretty cheap, so who cares, I'll buy another. There are a few things that will really make or break the knife for you. For one, its not a true scandi grind. It does have a secondary bevel. This has been done to give the edge more strength, this knife was really designed for heavy duty work! A 2nd feature you may or not care for, is the handle. Its a nice, big fat handle! I like it. I could use this thing for hours without it being uncomfortable, but I could see someone with smaller hands complaining about it. The sheath is fairly similar to Mora knives....it kind of sucks. I like the size of it, and the retention....but it really has no way of attaching to your belt. Its set up to attach to a button, apparently thats how they roll in Sweden. Its useless to me. Anyway, I'm giving 5 stars, great knife!
8**Y
Disappointing over-hyped blade
I'm afraid I fell prey to YouTube hype. Luckily this knife was cheap, so it will be relegated to hole digging in the garden or prying stuff. I kinda hope it breaks so I can throw it away. The blade arrived extremely dull. It wouldn't even begin to cut paper -- even card stock was too much for it. The secondary bevel from the factory basically destroys the scandi grind. I spent literally hours honing and stropping to try to bevel a cutting edge. The blade took a decent polish, but the cutting edge was impossible to smooth out, leaving me with a ragged blade that almost looks serrated under magnification. I am a pretty generous reviewer, but this knife is truly terrible. Stick to Mora or BPS if you want a usable cutting edge at a value price.
A**R
Hefty and Amazing Knife But Sheath Sucks!
I love Morakniv, no doubt about that, but I was just wanting a beefier blade and stouter handle and better ergonomics. So the knife is amazing, but the sheath is terrible! I'm going to have to buy a replacement so I can wear the knife at all. 🙁
W**L
Surprising quality and extreme value
I am a professional knife sharpener among many other things and am very impressed with the blade in this knife. The back side of the blade is not finished as a Morakniv would be but the thickness is better and it is one tough utility knife. After I finished sharpening it, it was razor sharp with a blade that will stand the rigors of use. I ordered metal bachelor buttons like the ones found on blue jean snaps for the knife to hang from. Add buttons on your work pants or coveralls and the knife will swivel 360 degrees without binding and it stays in its scabbard. It you wear overalls, it will snap on the side metal buttons that are there. Great for a country boy.
C**K
Better then expected quality.
Though came without a very sharp edges.It is easily hone to perfection. Worth every cents with this pretty hard carbon steel tools.Perfect.
R**N
A really nice knife!
Really nice and and sturdy knife! You can use it for those things you shouldn't really use a knife for, like hit it with a hammer to split wood, use it like a small prybar, scrape rust of brake parts and much more!
M**C
Un modèle à posséder, adapté à une infinité de situations
Cette marque propose pas mal d'autres références, plus récentes, plus flatteuse, un peu plus chères ... Celui ci est incontournable : il est basique et rustique, son étui simple ... mais quelle efficacité ! Vous n'en viendrez pas à bout même avec de mauvais traitements et peu d'entretien (attention tout de même il s'agit d'une lame au carbone et qui peut donc s'oxyder), il est plus lourd que la moyenne et surtout son manche est plus grand que la concurrence pour être adapté aux grandes mains pleines de doigts !!! J'ai également acheté les modèles de la marque commencant par un M et terminant par un A, mais celui ci est mon préféré avec un rapport qualité prix imbattable.
V**N
Das Grobmesser.
Ich habe vor kurzem angefangen, mich für Messer im Outdoor Bereich zu interessieren und habe zuerst mit dem Mora Companion angefangen (ein super Anfängermesser). Danach habe ich mich für die neuen Pro Modelle entschieden (Allround und Robust), jedoch war ich mit diesen nicht sehr zufrieden, da die Qualität nicht dem Preis entsprechend war und besonders die Griffe mit meinen Händen in Größe M mir zu klein waren. Man muss nicht lange suchen, um bei Messern im unteren Preissegment auf Hultafors zu stoßen und ich habe mir das GK und das OK1 zugelegt (zu dem OK1 habe ich auch ein paar Zeilen geschrieben). Das GK erfüllt für mich alle Kriterien zu 100%. Die Klinge ist sehr Robust, länger als beim Mora Robust und zudem auch schöner. Der Rücken des GK ist zwar ebenfalls unfertig, jedoch sieht er besser aus als beim Mora und man kann dennoch einen Feuerstahl benutzen. Die Schärfe ist super und sie hält auch wirklich gut, jedoch erscheint mir der zweite Schleifwinkel als eher hinderlich, da er beim OK1 fehlt und das ist nochmal einen ticken schärfer. Der Stahl ist ebenfalls top, da kann man nichts gegen sagen. Der Griff ist super in der Ergonomie, schön groß und er ist für 50% der Leistung des Messer verantwortlich. Einfach wuchtig, griffig und man kann über ihn sehr viel Kraft aufbringen. Ebenfalls gibt es zwischen Klinge und Griff keine Spaltmaße wie bei den Mora Pro Messern. Die Scheide von Hultafors ist zwar im Vergleich zu den Mora Scheiden schwere anzubringen, jedoch ist der Halt in der Scheide einfach super und deutlich höher als bei den Mora Pro Modellen (das Companion sitzt in seiner Scheide wie eine 1. Das ist wirklich sein Geld wert). Die Leistung des GK ist für den Preis einfach super. Es geht einfach durchs Holz und nimmt ordentlich was weg, man kann auf das Messer mit einem Hilfsmittel hämmern, um so größere Teile zu spalten und man kann generell sehr viel seitliche Kraft auf die Klinge bringen. Die macht einfach alles mit. Für den Preis, eines der besten Grobmesser für Anfänger. Absolute Kaufempfehlung.
P**1
Great Knife
Received the knife well before the projected delivery date. The knife is certainly robust but not heavy. It is well balanced, the 5" handle is comfortable, the large finger guard is a good safety feature, and the back edge of the knife is squared and throws sparks nicely. The case holds the knife well. I held the case upside down and couldn't shake the knife loose from it. The case doesn't have the conventional loop to attach to a belt. It has an oddball attachment system where you attach the case to a button sewn to your pants. Apart from the inconvenience of having to sew buttons on each of your bush pants/summer shorts, it looks like a recipe for a lost knife. I threaded a small carabinier through the button hole in the case and attached the carabinier to a belt loop on my pants. The knife is securely attached and the knife swings freely. Excellent knife, especially when considering the price.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 weeks ago