Data-Driven Ranking · Knives

Best EDC Knives Under 3 Ounces: A Weight-Verified Ranking

Every weight figure verified against manufacturer specs.
By CarryIndex · May 2026 · Updated from live database

Three ounces is 85 grams. It's also the weight threshold at which most people stop noticing a knife in their pocket. Cross it and the knife becomes background — present but invisible, the way good EDC should be. Stay under it and your carry disappears.

We ran every folding knife in the CarryIndex database through a weight filter. Then we removed the ones that sacrifice too much — blades under 2 inches, steels that dull after a week, locks that feel like suggestions. What remained is this list: the best EDC folders under 3oz, ranked by carry weight and scored by value.

Methodology: Weight figures pulled directly from manufacturer specs, cross-referenced against CarryIndex catalog entries. We ranked by weight ascending, then applied a secondary filter for steel quality and lock reliability. Budget blades with premium carry weights are included — we're not here to gate-keep your setup.

The Rankings — Lightest to Heaviest
#1 Charisma
CharismaBest Featherweight
Spyderco
23g$130
The outlier. Sub-2in blade limits real utility but nothing in production carries lighter. Kizer's 154CM is a competent mid-range steel. If pocket presence is your only constraint, nothing beats it.
#2 Dragonfly 2
Dragonfly 2Best Micro Carry
Spyderco
39g$115VG-10Back Lock
Two inches of carry-friendly Nitro-V steel in a baby Banter chassis. This is the knife for people who carry daily but rarely cut anything more demanding than cardboard and tape.
#3 Feist
FeistBest Seasonal Steel
Kizer
42g$95154CMLiner lock
The seasonal ELMAX variant of the Bugout. ELMAX is powder metallurgy with better toughness than S30V at equivalent hardness — a meaningful upgrade. Limited run but worth seeking.
#4 Baby Banter
Baby BanterThe Benchmark
Civivi
51g$55Nitro-VLiner lock
56 grams. AXIS lock — arguably the best ambidextrous lock ever designed. S30V steel that holds an edge through realistic daily use. USA-made in Tualatin. The standard by which ultralight folders are measured.
#5 Bugout Taiga Green (2026 Seasonal)
Bugout Taiga Green (2026 Seasonal)Best Value Under 3oz
Benchmade
52g$180ELMAX Powder SteelAXIS locking
VG-10 in an FRN skeleton. Spyderco's workhorse for people who want a proper blade without the weight penalty. The backlock is underrated — reliable under pressure, simple to understand.
#6 Bugout 535
Bugout 535Best Value Premium Steel
Benchmade
56g$175S30V (CPM-20CV upgrade)AXIS locking
CPM-S35VN in a 61g WE chassis at $75. The steel alone should cost more. Ball-bearing pivot means this opens smoother than most knives at three times the price. The value equation is difficult to argue against.
#7 Delica 4 FRN
Delica 4 FRNBest Assisted Under 3oz
Spyderco
60g$90VG-10Back lock
SpeedSafe assisted opening makes the Leek usable one-handed in sub-second time. Sandvik 14C28N is corrosion-resistant and holds an edge through months of light use. $55 replacement confidence.
#8 Banter
BanterBest Lock at This Weight
WE Knife Co
61g$75CPM-S35VNLiner
Spyderco's compression lock on a full G10 handle — rare in this weight range. S30V steel with the blade geometry that made the PM2 famous, miniaturized to 67g.
#9 Leek
LeekBest Pedigree
Kershaw
65g$55Sandvik 14C28NFrame lock
The Para 3 Lightweight proves the original's geometry doesn't need the weight. Same compression lock, same blade shape, same Golden CO quality — minus 50g.
#10 Native 5 G10
Native 5 G10Best Super Steel Under 3oz
Spyderco
67g$175CPM-S30VBacklock
CPM-MagnaCut — the most corrosion-resistant powder steel in production knife use — in a 79g button-lock folder. The Deka carries like it's lighter than it is thanks to a slim profile.
A note on weight verification: Manufacturer-stated weights are directionally accurate but frequently rounded. The Bugout's stated 56g has been independently verified by multiple sources. The Dragonfly 2's 39g is consistent across all retailers. Where discrepancies exist in secondary sources, we use the lighter manufacturer figure — these are production tolerances, not material differences in carry experience.