Steel Deep-Dive · Knives

CPM-S30V: The Steel That Started the Premium Production Era

The workhorse that made premium accessible — and why it's still worth carrying.
By CarryIndex · May 2026 · Updated from live catalog
59–61
HRC Range
★★★★☆
Edge Retention
★★★★☆
Corrosion Resist.
★★★☆☆
Toughness

CPM-S30V was Crucible Industries' first purpose-built knife steel — designed in collaboration with custom knifemaker Chris Reeve in 2001 to fix the fundamental trade-off between edge retention and toughness that plagued 440C and ATS-34. It used a powder metallurgy process to distribute vanadium carbides more evenly through the steel matrix, eliminating the large, stress-concentrating carbide clusters that caused chipping in earlier stainless steels.

It became the defining premium production steel of the 2000s. If you bought a mid-range or premium EDC folder between 2003 and 2015, there's a good chance it ran S30V. Spyderco, Benchmade, Zero Tolerance, and Chris Reeve all standardized on it. Its reputation was earned: it's genuinely better than 440C, AUS-8, and 8Cr13MoV in every meaningful metric.

Composition

Carbon 1.45% · Chromium 14.00% · Vanadium 4.00% · Molybdenum 2.00%. The 4% vanadium is higher than S35VN's 3%, which is what gives S30V its edge retention advantage on paper — but those vanadium carbides are larger and less evenly distributed, which is what makes it more prone to micro-chipping under hard use than its successor. The 14% chromium puts it firmly in stainless territory.

What it's actually like to carry

S30V at 59–61 HRC is a genuinely capable EDC steel. It holds an edge well for typical carry tasks, responds to a strop to extend time between sharpenings, and sharpens fairly easily on diamond stones or ceramic rods. The complaints about chipping are real but overblown for most use cases — if you're not batoning or prying, you won't chip it.

The real-world difference from S35VN is subtle. S35VN sharpens more cleanly at comparable hardness levels, produces a slightly finer edge, and is more forgiving under lateral stress. For most EDC use, you won't feel the difference. Where S35VN clearly wins is in consistency across batches — the niobium carbide addition reduced manufacturing variation, so there are fewer "bad batch" S35VN knives than there were S30V ones.

Where it sits in the hierarchy

S30V has largely been superseded in new production. Most brands that used it have moved to S35VN, 20CV, or MagnaCut. But it appears widely in older production, current budget lines, and the secondary market. Buying a used Benchmade or Spyderco in S30V is a perfectly sound choice — you're not getting a worse knife, you're getting a proven steel that's now slightly off the marketing conversation.

CPM-S30V Knives in the CarryIndex Database
Paramilitary 2
Spyderco
Paramilitary 2
CPM-S30V122gCompression Lock
$200
View on CarryIndex →
Native 5 G10
Spyderco
Native 5 G10
CPM-S30V67gBack Lock
$175
View on CarryIndex →
Bugout 535
Benchmade
Bugout 535
S30V / CPM-20CV56gAxis Lock
$175
View on CarryIndex →
CPM-S30V vs. Adjacent Steels
SteelHRCEdge RetentionToughnessCorrosion Resist.Sharpenability
8Cr13MoV58–60FairGoodGoodEasy
AUS-857–59Fair–GoodGoodGoodEasy
CPM-S30V59–61Very GoodGoodVery GoodEasy–Medium
CPM-S35VN62–64Very GoodVery GoodVery GoodEasy–Medium
CPM-MagnaCut61–65ExcellentExcellentOutstandingMedium
◆ CarryIndex Verdict
Buy a knife in CPM-S30V when: you're buying on the secondary market where S30V is common and competitively priced, you want a proven production steel with 20 years of real-world track record, or you're picking up an older Spyderco or Benchmade at a good price. It is not a compromised choice — it's an excellent steel that has simply been surpassed by its successors.

Consider stepping up when: you're buying new production where S35VN or 20CV is available at the same price point. There's no reason to choose S30V over S35VN in a new knife. If the knife you want comes in S30V, don't let that stop you — but don't seek it out as a feature.