VG-10 vs SG2 Steel β Which Is Better for Kitchen Knives?
Last reviewed: April 2026 | FOGAMA Editorial Team
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VG-10 and SG2 are the two most cited steel grades in Japanese kitchen knife buying. Both are excellent. They are not the same. The difference between them determines not just edge performance, but the entire maintenance routine, the correct sharpening tools, and who each knife suits. This guide tells you exactly which to choose.
VG-10 vs SG2 β The Quick Answer
VG-10 Steel
- HRC: 60β61
- Edge retention: Excellent
- Sharpening ease: Moderate
- Best for: Home cooks entering Japanese steel
- Examples: Tojiro DP, Shun Classic
- Entry price: From ~Β£65
SG2 Powder Steel
- HRC: 62β64
- Edge retention: Outstanding
- Sharpening ease: Harder β needs quality stone
- Best for: Experienced cooks, careful maintainers
- Examples: Miyabi 5000 MCD, Takamura
- Entry price: From ~Β£200
What Is VG-10 Steel?
VG-10 is a Japanese stainless steel alloy developed by Takefu Special Steel. The “VG” stands for “V-Gold” β a marketing designation. The “10” indicates approximately 1% carbon content. The full composition includes chromium (15%), cobalt (1.5%), molybdenum (1%), and vanadium (0.2%), alongside the carbon.
This combination delivers a steel that reaches 60β61 HRC β hard enough for a genuinely sharp Japanese-spec edge at 15β16Β° per side, with good corrosion resistance and adequate toughness for everyday kitchen use. VG-10 is the workhorse steel of the Japanese knife industry. More quality knives are made with VG-10 than any other Japanese alloy.
Key quality: VG-10 is predictable. Factory edges from reputable manufacturers (Shun, Tojiro) are consistently sharp. Sharpening on a 1000/6000 grit whetstone produces excellent results reliably. Maintenance requires a smooth ceramic honing rod and occasional whetstone sessions.
What Is SG2 (R2) Powder Steel?
SG2 β also designated R2 by some manufacturers β is a powder metallurgy steel produced by Takefu Special Steel. The powder metallurgy process creates a steel with a much finer, more uniform carbide distribution than conventional steels. This means sharper possible edges, better edge retention, and a more consistent steel throughout the blade.
SG2 reaches 62β64 HRC β noticeably harder than VG-10. The increased hardness enables more acute edge angles. Miyabi’s 5000 MCD line uses SG2 with a Honbazuke-honed 9.5Β° edge β one of the most acute angles on any production kitchen knife. Edge retention is measurably better than VG-10, though the difference requires objective testing to confirm; both steels hold an edge well by any normal standard.
Key trade-off: SG2 is harder to sharpen. The fine carbide structure that makes it so sharp also resists the whetstone. You need a quality stone and good technique to sharpen SG2 effectively. A basic combination stone that works well for VG-10 may not produce optimal results on SG2 above 63 HRC.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Property | VG-10 | SG2 / R2 | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hardness | 60β61 HRC | 62β64 HRC | SG2 β harder |
| Edge retention | Excellent | Outstanding | SG2 β measurably longer |
| Maximum sharpness | Very sharp (15β16Β°) | Exceptional (9.5β14Β°) | SG2 β more acute angles possible |
| Sharpening ease | Moderate β 1000/6000 whetstone | Harder β quality stone required | VG-10 β more forgiving |
| Chip resistance | Moderate | Lower β more brittle | VG-10 β tougher |
| Corrosion resistance | Good | Good | Tie |
| Entry price | From ~Β£65 (Tojiro DP) | From ~Β£200 (Miyabi 5000 MCD) | VG-10 β dramatically better value |
| Best for | Home cooks entering Japanese steel | Experienced enthusiasts | Depends on your skill level |
Manufacturing Process β Why It Matters
The difference in performance between VG-10 and SG2 traces back to how they are made. VG-10 is a conventional melt-and-cast steel β the alloy elements are mixed in molten form and poured into billets. This produces a steel with carbide particles distributed throughout, though with some natural variation in size and spacing.
SG2 is made by the powder metallurgy process: the steel is atomised into fine powder, which is then consolidated under high pressure. The result is a steel with exceptionally fine, uniform carbide distribution. Finer carbides mean a more consistent edge that can be ground more acutely. This is why SG2 can sustain a 9.5Β° edge while VG-10 typically works best at 15Β°+.
Which Should You Choose?
Choose VG-10 if:
- You are entering Japanese kitchen knives for the first time
- You want excellent Japanese-spec performance without premium pricing
- You are still developing your whetstone sharpening technique
- Budget is a consideration β the Tojiro DP Gyuto at ~Β£65 is unbeatable value
Choose SG2 if:
- You are an experienced knife user with established whetstone technique
- You want the sharpest possible edge and the longest edge retention available
- You cook frequently and will notice the difference between 60 HRC and 63 HRC in use
- You are prepared to invest in a quality sharpening stone (Shapton, Naniwa) for best results
- Budget is secondary to performance
Frequently Asked Questions
Is SG2 better than VG-10?
What knives use VG-10 steel?
What knives use SG2 steel?
Can I use a pull-through sharpener on VG-10 or SG2?
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