• At KIREAJI, every order begins not in a warehouse, but in the hands of master craftsmen in Sakai, Japan.
    Handles are carefully fitted, blades are inspected, and upon request, the final Honbazuke hand-sharpening is performed. This artisanal process takes time — but it ensures that the knife arriving at your door is not just a product, but a piece of Sakai’s living tradition.

  • Shipping Method & Timeline

    • Completion & Delivery: Please allow approximately 2–4 weeks for preparation and shipping, as each knife is individually prepared, finished, and inspected by skilled artisans before shipment.
    • Tracking: Once shipped, you will receive a tracking number via Japan Post to monitor the journey of your knife.
  • Changing Your Shipping Address

    If you need to update your shipping address, please contact our customer service team as soon as possible.
    Please note that processing an address change may extend delivery time.
    Once an order has been shipped, however, we are unable to change the delivery address.

  • Returns & Eligibility

    For detailed information, please refer to our Return Policy. If you have questions, our team is here to help through our Contact Us page.

  • Important Information for Our U.S. Customers

  • Recent changes to U.S. import regulations may affect customs duties and import charges on Japanese knives.

    As these charges are determined by U.S. Customs, we cannot predict the final amount that may be assessed.

    Please review our latest tariff information before ordering.

    Learn More About U.S. Tariffs and Import Charges 
  • Important Notice on International Orders:

    Depending on your country’s regulations, the product type, and the declared value of the shipment, import duties, taxes, or customs fees may be required upon delivery.

    Please note that it is the customer’s responsibility to check any applicable import restrictions, customs regulations, or requirements before placing an order.

    In cases where a shipment is returned, rejected, or unable to be delivered due to customs regulations, we regret that we are unable to offer refunds or accept returns.

  • Shipping Information for International Customers

    At KIREAJI, we are proud to deliver handcrafted Japanese knives to customers around the world.

    We are pleased to offer complimentary shipping to customers in the United States and Canada.

    For all other countries, shipping fees apply as listed in the table below.

    All orders are shipped via Japan Post with tracking, and delivery typically takes 2 to 4 weeks, depending on the destination and customs procedures.

Shipping Rates by Region (CAD)

Asia(Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Cambodia, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Hong Kong SAR)

45CAD
We ship globally via Japan Post with tracking. Delivery time is typically 2–4 weeks.

Oceania (Australia, New Zealand, New Caledonia)

67CAD
We ship globally via Japan Post with tracking. Delivery time is typically 2–4 weeks.

Middle East (Jordan, Qatar, Kuwait)

67CAD
We ship globally via Japan Post with tracking. Delivery time is typically 2–4 weeks.

Africa (Côte d’Ivoire)

81CAD
We ship globally via Japan Post with tracking. Delivery time is typically 2–4 weeks.

Europe (Switzerland)

67CAD
We ship globally via Japan Post with tracking. Delivery time is typically 2–4 weeks.

Europe, Other Countries (Not listed above)

Please contact us

  • Our Commitment

    Every KIREAJI shipment is more than logistics — it is a cultural bridge.
    We do not rush. We do not compromise.
    Your patience allows us to deliver a knife that carries not only sharpness, but also the spirit of Sakai’s centuries-old craftsmanship, directly to your kitchen.

  • From Sakai’s Forge to Your Home The KIREAJI Shipping Journey

    Each KIREAJI knife is handcrafted to order in Sakai, then prepared carefully over 2–4 weeks before shipping.
    Your knife is sent with full tracking, while import duties remain the customer’s responsibility, and customs-related returns cannot be refunded.

Global Delivery from Sakai

Looking for an authentic Japanese knife? From Sakai, the home of 600 years of tradition, master-crafted blades can be delivered straight to your door—anywhere in the world. Experience the reliability of our trusted direct shipping service.

Global Delivery from Sakai

The KIREAJI Made to Order Experience

At KIREAJI, every knife is individually prepared after your order is placed, with final fitting, blade adjustment, sharpening, and finishing carried out by skilled artisans in Sakai, Japan.

Each step is completed by hand with careful attention to balance, precision, and craftsmanship. Because of this process, we kindly ask for approximately 2 to 4 weeks before your knife is ready to ship.

We believe true craftsmanship is worth the wait.

Made to Order Japanese Knives
  • When I moved overseas, I expected to find Japanese knives in the market. What I didn't expect was how many of them had almost nothing to do with Japan.

    They had Japanese-sounding names. Some had kanji printed on the blade. The packaging used words like "artisan" and "hand-forged" and occasionally "Samurai." They sat in kitchenware stores alongside genuine imported goods, and unless you knew what you were looking for, there was little to tell them apart. Some were sold at prices that made them seem credible. Some were sold cheaply, which in a different way also made them seem credible — a bargain on something exotic.

    I stood in those stores and felt something I hadn't anticipated: a quiet kind of grief.

  • What Gets Lost When a Craft Is Imitated

    Imitation is not always malicious. Some of it is simply opportunistic — a category becomes desirable, and manufacturers move to fill it with whatever can be made quickly and cheaply enough to turn a profit. No one sets out to deceive, necessarily. They set out to sell.

    But the effect on the customer is the same regardless of intent. Someone buys what they believe is a Japanese knife. They use it. It doesn't perform the way they hoped. They conclude, reasonably, that Japanese knives are overrated — that the reputation exceeds the reality. They never get to find out what the real thing is like, because they never held it.

    And the effect on the craft is corrosive in its own way. When imitations flood a market, they set a false standard. They define, in the minds of consumers who have no other reference point, what a Japanese knife is. The genuine article — the knife made in Sakai by craftspeople who have spent decades learning a tradition that is itself centuries old — becomes harder to find, harder to distinguish, and easier to dismiss.

    This is how a culture gets diluted. Not through any single dramatic act, but through the slow accumulation of substitutes that carry the name without the substance.

  • Why Sakai, and Why It Matters

    Sakai is not simply a place that happens to make knives. It is a city whose identity has been built around the knife-making craft for over six hundred years. The particular techniques used there — the ura-suki hollow ground into the back of single-bevel blades, the division of labor between the smith and the sharpener, the progression through whetstones that gives a Sakai edge its final character — are not marketing language. They are the accumulated result of generations of people who did little else but refine these things.

    When I speak of a genuine Sakai knife, I am not speaking of a style or an aesthetic. I am speaking of a specific place, specific people, and a specific set of skills that cannot be replicated by printing kanji on a blade manufactured somewhere else entirely.

    The difference is not subtle once you hold both. The weight settles differently. The edge behaves differently. The knife asks something different of you, and gives something different back. People who have cooked with a real Sakai knife for years often say they cannot explain exactly what it is — only that every other knife now feels like a compromise.

    That experience is what the imitations are selling the promise of, without the ability to deliver it.

  • Sending Knives Directly from Sakai: A Simple Act With a Larger Meaning

    After living abroad and seeing this with my own eyes, something became clear to me. It was not enough to be troubled by what I saw. The question was what could actually be done about it.

    The answer, when I thought it through, was straightforward — almost uncomfortably so. If the problem is distance between the genuine article and the person who wants it, the solution is to close that distance. Ship directly from Sakai to the customer. No intermediaries who might not know the difference. No retail environments where imitations and originals share shelf space. A direct line from the workshop where the knife was made to the kitchen where it will be used.

    This is what we do. A knife made in Sakai, shipped from Sakai, arriving at your door with the full transparency of its origin intact. You know where it was made. You know who made it. You know the tradition it comes from.

    That transparency is not a sales pitch. It is the minimum that a genuine product owes to the person buying it.

  • On Sincerity, and What It Has to Do With Knives

    There is a concept in Japanese culture — makoto — that is often translated as sincerity, but means something closer to the alignment between what is true and what is presented. To act with makoto is to ensure that the outside matches the inside, that what you offer is genuinely what you say it is.

    I think about this when I think about what we are trying to do.

    Sending a genuine Sakai knife directly to a customer overseas is, in one sense, a logistics decision. But it is also a statement of makoto. It is a refusal to allow the space between maker and user to be filled with something false. It is an insistence that if someone is going to hold a piece of Japanese knife-making culture in their hands, it should actually be that — not an imitation of it, not a product that borrows the language of the craft without inheriting any of its substance.

    The craftspeople in Sakai who make these knives have spent their lives in service of something they believe in. The smith who forges the blade. The sharpener who brings it to its final edge. They are not making objects. They are carrying forward a tradition that connects them to everyone who practiced these skills before them, and to everyone who will hold the result of their work in the future.

    That tradition deserves to reach the people who are looking for it — not a copy of it, not a product that gestures toward it, but the thing itself.

  • What You Can Trust, and Why

    When your knife arrives from Sakai, you are receiving something specific. Not "Japanese-style." Not "inspired by." Made in Sakai, by people whose craft is Sakai's craft, in a city that has been doing this longer than most countries have had their current borders.

    You are also, in a small but real way, participating in the preservation of something. Every genuine knife that reaches someone who uses it, maintains it, and comes to understand what makes it different is one more thread in the continuation of a tradition that imitations actively work to unravel.

    We moved abroad. We saw what happens when a culture's craft gets separated from its source. We came back to Sakai, and we decided that the most honest thing we could do was draw a direct line — from here to you.

    That line is what we are.

  • The Art of the Artisan: Not Just Work, But a Life Filled with Dedication

    An artisan’s craft is more than just a profession — it is a reflection of a way of life. Through daily work, artisans do more than shape materials; they bring care, discipline, and sincerity into every piece they create.

    When crafting a tool, every movement carries meaning. Even the smallest shortcut can diminish the honesty of the work. What artisans hold in their hands is not only skill, but also generations of pride, knowledge, and dedication passed down over decades and centuries.

    For an artisan, work is not simply a way to earn a living. It is a way to express values, character, and respect for the craft itself.

    That is why even the most routine tasks are approached with genuine care and attention. And it is this steady commitment, repeated day after day, that continues to sustain the tradition of craftsmanship.

  • japanese_knife_made_in_Sakai

    1. Forged in the Legacy of Sakai

    From Sakai City—Japan’s renowned birthplace of professional kitchen knives—each blade is crafted by master artisans with over six centuries of tradition. Perfectly balanced, enduringly sharp, and exquisitely finished, every cut carries the soul of true craftsmanship.

  • 2. Thoughtful Care for Everyday Use

    Every knife includes a hand-fitted magnolia saya for safe storage. Upon request, we offer a complimentary Honbazuke final hand sharpening—giving you a precise, ready-to-use edge from day one.

  • 3. A Partnership for a Lifetime

    A KIREAJI knife is more than a tool—it is a lifelong companion. With our bespoke paid aftercare services, we preserve its edge and beauty, ensuring it remains as precise and dependable as the day it first met your hand.