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expiredStrongWeather642 | Staff posted Mar 24, 2026 10:21 AM
expiredStrongWeather642 | Staff posted Mar 24, 2026 10:21 AM

3" Mercer Culinary Millennia Slim Paring Knife (Various Colors)

$6.20

$12

48% off
Amazon
14 Comments 7,657 Views
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Deal Details
Amazon has 3" Mercer Culinary Millennia Slim Paring Knife (various colors) on sale for $6.18. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.

Thanks to Deal Hunter StrongWeather642 for finding this deal.

Available colors:
  • Green (M23930GR$6.18
  • Red (M23930RD) $6.18
  • Yellow (M23930YL) $6.18
Product Details:
  • Ergonomic handle - a combination of Santoprene for comfort and polypropylene for durability.
  • Textured finger points provide slip resistance, grip, and safety. Protective finger guard.
  • Hand wash knives for blade edge and surface care.
  • The highest quality Japanese steel allows for easy blade maintenance and rapid sharpening for a razor-sharp edge.
  • One-piece high-carbon, stain-resistant Japanese steel.

Editor's Notes

Written by RevOne | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • Our research indicates that this deal is $2.99 less (32% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $9.17 at the time of this post.
    • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • About this store:

Original Post

Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has 3" Mercer Culinary Millennia Slim Paring Knife (various colors) on sale for $6.18. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.

Thanks to Deal Hunter StrongWeather642 for finding this deal.

Available colors:
  • Green (M23930GR$6.18
  • Red (M23930RD) $6.18
  • Yellow (M23930YL) $6.18
Product Details:
  • Ergonomic handle - a combination of Santoprene for comfort and polypropylene for durability.
  • Textured finger points provide slip resistance, grip, and safety. Protective finger guard.
  • Hand wash knives for blade edge and surface care.
  • The highest quality Japanese steel allows for easy blade maintenance and rapid sharpening for a razor-sharp edge.
  • One-piece high-carbon, stain-resistant Japanese steel.

Editor's Notes

Written by RevOne | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • Our research indicates that this deal is $2.99 less (32% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $9.17 at the time of this post.
    • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • About this store:

Original Post

Community Voting

Deal Score
+35
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Price Intelligence

Model: Paring Knife,3 In.,Green Handle

Deal History 

Sale Price
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Current Prices

Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 4/8/2026, 08:55 PM
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Amazon$16.09

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Top Comments

the_hork
275 Posts
46 Reputation
The shape is quite good for paring knives but the steel, x30, is fairly low HRC. It's easy to sharpen and you'll be doing it quite often if you want to maintain factory sharpness or better. About the shape, it's lightweight, skinny, and nimble and doesn't have an annoying bolster in the way which I like.

14 Comments

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Mar 24, 2026 02:03 PM
275 Posts
Joined Aug 2017
the_horkMar 24, 2026 02:03 PM
275 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank the_hork

The shape is quite good for paring knives but the steel, x30, is fairly low HRC. It's easy to sharpen and you'll be doing it quite often if you want to maintain factory sharpness or better. About the shape, it's lightweight, skinny, and nimble and doesn't have an annoying bolster in the way which I like.
5
Mar 24, 2026 05:47 PM
267 Posts
Joined May 2017
makaveliartsMar 24, 2026 05:47 PM
267 Posts
Seems like a good value to me
Mar 24, 2026 05:53 PM
3,239 Posts
Joined Aug 2009
Teaser38Mar 24, 2026 05:53 PM
3,239 Posts
You can pick up Victorinox paring knives for $4 from Webstaurant with the caveat that you have to deal with the more or less flat $20 shipping fee. Normally, a always drop a pairing knife into my cart whenever I put together an order.
Last edited by Teaser38 March 24, 2026 at 10:56 AM.
Mar 24, 2026 06:42 PM
931 Posts
Joined Jan 2015
ThinKingMar 24, 2026 06:42 PM
931 Posts
Blue is available for the same price. I got one in '20 and its just fine.
Mar 24, 2026 07:41 PM
155 Posts
Joined Sep 2014
istayballinMar 24, 2026 07:41 PM
155 Posts
I have 3 of these and been using them over 10 years. They're great out the box but require sharpening as others mention.

This is the better option and one i reach for most:
https://a.co/d/09NVYN2g
1
Mar 24, 2026 09:06 PM
2,342 Posts
Joined Feb 2005
DarnCrazyMar 24, 2026 09:06 PM
2,342 Posts
Quote from istayballin :
I have 3 of these and been using them over 10 years. They're great out the box but require sharpening as others mention.

This is the better option and one i reach for most:
https://a.co/d/09NVYN2g
How do you like the kiwi knives? I've always heard these were good for being super cheap and practice knives for learning on a whetstone but hasn't seen many people actually recommend them for daily use.
Mar 24, 2026 11:54 PM
241 Posts
Joined Dec 2013
SlickRickardoMar 24, 2026 11:54 PM
241 Posts
This is the normal price. I'm curious how so many normal price items get so many votes on SD

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Pro
Mar 25, 2026 12:03 AM
485 Posts
Joined Mar 2017
blocky
Pro
Mar 25, 2026 12:03 AM
485 Posts
Quote from Teaser38 :
You can pick up Victorinox paring knives for $4 from Webstaurant with the caveat that you have to deal with the more or less flat $20 shipping fee. Normally, a always drop a pairing knife into my cart whenever I put together an order.
I have both a Mercer and Victorinox knife here at my workbench. Turning them over, they are essentially identical in length, width, tang, and blade profile. However, the Mercer is minutely thicker (we're talking 0.1mm thicker) and about 3mm taller. That makes the blade noticably stiffer and in my opinion more confident when cutting. Both are quite slicy.

The Victorinox has more handle material 'relieved' near the 'bolster'. This makes it sit very snugly when holding the knife outward facing, but in my experience, with medium-large hands, when paring with the blade oriented towards me, it feels slippy. I have to use a tighter grip than any of my other paring knives, or it wants to rotate while cutting. Holding a fist shape in a pinch limits the range of material I can slice and is tiring to the hand.

Both are very clearly budget knives, but because I use many such knives also in craftwork and packing, I have a lot of experience using them in different materials and sharpening them.

I like the Mercer and keep it at my workbench. The Victorinox is very much not for me, but also at my workbench. I use it to open boxes and pry at things that are too slim for a prybar (as a trained professional on a closed course with full safety gear do not try this at home.)

My favorite budget kitchen parer is the restaurant-style, American-made Dexter: https://www.amazon.com/Dexter-Rus...01DVJ0MUO/
It has an evenly-wide, knurled handle and is effortless to hold in any position. I have straight and scalloped versions of these. Cutting fruits and vegetables, I rarely have to sharpen them.

I also have a Spyderco paring knife which feels like it's made for highly detailed vegetable art and not for actually processing food. I have a generic VG-10 paring knife and some ICEL and 1980's Chicago Cutlery parers which were passed down from family, and those are also a great value, but mostly I just grab the Dexters.

I paid ~$4 for my Mercer parer, so this deal feels lukewarm.
1
Mar 25, 2026 03:21 AM
125 Posts
Joined May 2013
jesuspwner420Mar 25, 2026 03:21 AM
125 Posts
I'm curious how this compares to a Kuhn Rikon paring knife in terms of edge retention and blade geometry, something that resharpens easily
Mar 25, 2026 07:03 AM
673 Posts
Joined Jul 2006
quizmeMar 25, 2026 07:03 AM
673 Posts
It's hard to find a good paring knife - but this one got some pretty good reviews - think I will give it a try. Thanks, OP. Smilie
Pro
Mar 25, 2026 02:08 PM
485 Posts
Joined Mar 2017
blocky
Pro
Mar 25, 2026 02:08 PM
485 Posts
Quote from jesuspwner420 :
I'm curious how this compares to a Kuhn Rikon paring knife in terms of edge retention and blade geometry, something that resharpens easily
I have a single Kuhn Rikon knife - a 4" scalloped-edge parer so I think I can weigh in on this somewhat.

The Kuhn has a taller blade than both the Mercer and Victorinox, which helps with rigidity. The blade geometry has a two-stage bevel, so it doesn't feel as slicey, per se, but the overall thickness of the blade is thinner than the mercer, almost as thin as the Victorinox, and I feel that the ceramic coating helps reduce drag in grabby materials like bread and cheese. So, although it creates more of a wedge with the angle of the bevel, in the hand, it balances out to just feel like it has more control.

It has less of a tang - about 1" depth, but mine is 15-20 years old and no issues there. I have never batoned anything with it, and the blade is still perfectly secured.

I like a 3-3.5" paring knife. The Kuhn Rikon is 4" and feels like a good compromise. The height of the blade extends below the handle, and it has a subtle swept-back angle like a Santoku knife. These two things make it better suited to cutting on a board than peeling, but it does peel competently (maybe less so for smaller hands) and feels natural in the hand.

The handle of the Kuhn Rikon is overall thicker than the Mercer, and it tapers towards the blade, without that half-finger taper on the underside. I think this is preferable for control with different hand positions that are not full-grip - i.e. most of the ways one would typically hold a paring knife. The plastic on mine is a slightly softer plastic which, although smooth, has a nice grippiness. I have no idea if this is due to mine being very old or if even the same plastics are in use today, but I imagine it's unchanged.

My Kuhn Rikon is one of the easiest knives I have to touch up, probably easier than the Mercer, but I haven't done them back to back, and of course, one of them is scalloped so I can't compare directly. I'm middling at sharpening so I don't often chase razor edges, and I don't have any artisan knives. In the kitchen, mostly I touch things up as I go, and not very religiously. I make up for this somewhat by being very practiced with cutting angles and not abusing blades. (I've never had to put a new edge on something that didn't come to me already destroyed, and I'm not set-up to do that well.) So perhaps take my sharpening insight with a grain of salt.

Can't go wrong with either in this price range. If you are interested in this sort of thing, holding them in the hand will reveal a lot, and almost immediately.

I think paring knives are where it's at for most quick tasks. It doesn't hurt to have a few. In our household, we have 5 paring knives in the kitchen that see use daily.

edit: Adding, I think the Kuhn Rikon holds an edge better, but the scalloped blade on mine might be as much of a factor functionally as blade steel.
Last edited by blocky March 25, 2026 at 09:53 AM.
Mar 26, 2026 04:27 PM
54 Posts
Joined Sep 2017
Fixation68Mar 26, 2026 04:27 PM
54 Posts
I will prob grab 2-3 and just rotate till i sharpen... Time to sharpen all my knives is getting to be a all day thing
Mar 26, 2026 05:15 PM
183 Posts
Joined Oct 2021
buekiebobMar 26, 2026 05:15 PM
183 Posts
Caution: Use the links posted above or the price displayed may be higher. I initially looked at (and ultimately bought) a green one for $6.18...but when I looked at the other colors while still on Amazon, the prices displayed for them were higher (red - $17.16 , yellow - $14.69). When I came back to SD and used the posted links to access the red knife , the special $6.18 price was displayed for it but the other two (green and yellow) were displaying higher prices. Same thing happened when I tried the link for the yellow knife.
Mar 27, 2026 01:06 PM
241 Posts
Joined Dec 2013
SlickRickardoMar 27, 2026 01:06 PM
241 Posts
Quote from buekiebob :
Caution: Use the links posted above or the price displayed may be higher. I initially looked at (and ultimately bought) a green one for $6.18...but when I looked at the other colors while still on Amazon, the prices displayed for them were higher (red - $17.16 , yellow - $14.69). When I came back to SD and used the posted links to access the red knife , the special $6.18 price was displayed for it but the other two (green and yellow) were displaying higher prices. Same thing happened when I tried the link for the yellow knife.
Good to know. Just fyi. $6 is the normal price. Check 30 and 90 day history

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