Steel Deep-Dive · Knives

Sandvik 14C28N: The Best Entry-Level Steel Nobody Talks About

The steel in your Kershaw. More capable than its price tag suggests, and the right choice for zero-maintenance EDC.
By CarryIndex · May 2026 · Updated from live catalog
56–62
HRC Range
★★★☆☆
Edge Retention
★★★★★
Corrosion Resist.
★★★★★
Toughness

Sandvik 14C28N is a Swedish stainless steel developed by Sandvik Materials Technology specifically for knife blades. The "N" in the name refers to nitrogen — a deliberate nitrogen addition that improves corrosion resistance, hardness potential, and carbide distribution simultaneously. It was introduced in 2009 as an upgrade to 13C26, Sandvik's previous knife-specific alloy, and became the standard steel for Mora (Swedish fixed blades) and several Kershaw folders shortly thereafter.

14C28N punches above its price class. At $30–80, it competes favorably with more expensive steels on corrosion resistance and toughness while keeping the cost of production low enough that it appears in entry-level knives. The Kershaw Leek in 14C28N is one of the best-value EDC folders available — a slim, fast-deploying knife that outperforms its $40 price tag on every steel metric that matters for actual carry.

Composition

Carbon 0.62% · Chromium 14.00% · Nitrogen 0.11% · Silicon 0.70% · Manganese 0.60%. The carbon content (0.62%) is notably lower than premium CPM steels, which is the primary reason edge retention is modest — you simply can't form as many hard carbides with half the carbon. The nitrogen addition compensates by filling grain boundaries, improving wear resistance beyond what carbon alone at that percentage would predict. The 14% chromium plus nitrogen is what gives it outstanding corrosion resistance.

What it's actually like to carry

14C28N is the most practical EDC steel for people who don't think about steel. It sharpens quickly and easily on anything — a ceramic mug, a $10 pull-through sharpener, a piece of leather — and returns to a working edge without skill or specialized equipment. It won't win a slicing test against M390 but it's ready to go again in two minutes flat. Corrosion resistance is genuinely exceptional: Mora uses it in their fishing knives specifically because it handles blood, scales, and saltwater without complaint.

The ceiling is real: at the hardness most manufacturers run it (58–60 HRC), you're not getting premium edge retention. For paper, cardboard, and packaging, the edge dulls faster than CPM steels. For fibrous or coarse materials, the difference is more noticeable. If you carry a knife for cutting tasks all day, you'll feel the limitation. If you carry a knife for occasional tasks and want zero maintenance overhead, 14C28N is arguably the best choice in the catalog.

Where it sits in the hierarchy

14C28N is definitively a budget and entry-level steel — not because the metallurgy is compromised, but because its edge retention ceiling limits its appeal for enthusiasts who measure their steel's performance seriously. Within its segment, it is the best-in-class choice. A 14C28N Kershaw is better than an 8Cr13MoV CRKT at the same price every time. It's the right entry point for someone new to quality EDC who wants a steel that will never rust and always sharpen.

Sandvik 14C28N Knives in the CarryIndex Database
Leek
Kershaw
Leek
14C28N65gSpeedSafe
$55
View on CarryIndex →
Sandvik 14C28N vs. Adjacent Steels
SteelHRCEdge RetentionToughnessCorrosion Resist.Sharpenability
8Cr13MoV58–60FairGoodGoodEasy
Sandvik 14C28N56–62GoodExcellentExcellentVery Easy
AUS-857–59Fair–GoodGoodGoodEasy
VG-1060–62Very GoodGoodExcellentMedium
CPM-S30V59–61Very GoodGoodVery GoodEasy–Medium
◆ CarryIndex Verdict
Buy a knife in Sandvik 14C28N when: you want your first quality EDC and don't want to think about maintenance, your budget is under $60, you're in a wet or coastal environment where corrosion resistance matters more than edge retention, or you need a knife that any beginner can sharpen on any equipment. The Kershaw Leek is the canonical recommendation — a slim, elegant, everyday folder that overdelivers for its price.

Consider stepping up when: you've carried 14C28N and find yourself re-sharpening more often than you'd like, or you're ready to spend $100+ where S35VN becomes the standard offering. 14C28N is not a stepping stone to avoid — it's the correct choice for its segment, and many experienced carry enthusiasts keep a 14C28N Kershaw as their "don't care" beater alongside their premium knives.