

High quality and reliable hair cutting shears are a hairdresser's most valuable tool. For an experienced hairdresser or barber, a good pair of shears will give you the ability to work with anything that a customer throws at you.
The 15 Best Barber Shears of 2026
Every pair on this list has been chosen for what actually matters behind the chair: blade length, steel quality, edge type, and whether the handle holds up through a full book of clients.
Most "best scissors" guides are written for hairdressers. This one isn't. Barbering has different demands: longer blades for scissor-over-comb, enough blade weight to move through dense men's hair efficiently, and edges that stay sharp through 15 cuts a day, not 8. The shears here are specifically chosen with that in mind.
You'll find Japanese and German options across every price point, from reliable 440C daily drivers to ATS-314 cobalt workhorses and handcrafted Damascus pieces. We've kept the cuts short and the specs honest.
If you need to see size guidance, steel comparisons, or blade type explanations, skip to the Koop Gids op die bodem.
| # | skeer | Steel | Groottes | Beste vir | Oorsprong |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Yasaka 7.0 " | ATS-314 | 7.0 " | Scissor-over-comb, fades | Japan |
| 2 | Juntetsu-swaard | ATS-314 | 6.0 "- 7.0" | Skin fades, detail work | Japan |
| 3 | Kamisori swaard | 440C | 6.0 "- 7.5" | Power cutting, left-handers | Japan |
| 4 | Juntetsu Mastersmith Set | ATS-314 | 7.0" pair | Complete matched system | Japan |
| 5 | Kasho Silver Offset | V10W | 6.5 "- 7.0" | Slide cutting, precision | Japan |
| 6 | Kasho Damaskus | VG-10 | 6.0 "- 6.5" | Precision, aesthetics | Japan |
| 7 | Joewell Klassiek | Eiendoms | 4.5 "- 7.0" | Universal, longevity | Japan |
| 8 | Ichiro Katana | 440C | 6.0 "- 7.0" | Power cutting, dry cut | Japan |
| 9 | Ichiro Tsurugi | 440C | 6.0 "- 7.0" | Skêr-oor-kam | Japan |
| 10 | Ichiro K10 | VG10 | veelvuldige | Best value, apprentices | Japan |
| 11 | Juntetsu Yuki Sword | VG10 | 6.5 "- 7.0" | Slide cutting, blending | Japan |
| 12 | Juntetsu Moonlight | VG10 | 6.0 "- 7.0" | Point cutting, versatile | Japan |
| 13 | Juntetsu Ergo Barber | VG10 | 6.0 "- 7.0" | Everyday, razor kit incl. | Japan |
| 14 | Jaguar Pre Style Relax P | Chroom | 6.5 "- 7.0" | Fine hair, low maintenance | Duitsland |
| 15 | Jaguar Relax Set | Chroom | 6.5"/7.0" + 6.0" | Complete German set | Duitsland |
Jump to a shear
- Yasaka 7.0" Barber Scissor
- Juntetsu-swaard
- Kamisori swaard
- Juntetsu Mastersmith Cobalt 7.0" Set
- Kasho Silver Offset
- Kasho Damascus Offset
- Joewell Klassiek
- Ichiro Sword (Katana) Barber
- Ichiro Tsurugi Barber
- Ichiro K10
- Juntetsu Yuki Sword
- Juntetsu Moonlight Sword
- Juntetsu Ergo Barber
- Jaguar Pre Style Relax P
- Jaguar Relax Professional Barber Set
| Hanteer | Semi-Offset / Ergonomic |
| Steel | ATS-314 Cobalt Stainless Steel |
| Hardheid | 62 - 63 HRC |
| grootte | 7.0 " |
| Blade | Clam-Shaped Convex Edge |
| Voltooi | Mirror-Polished |
| Oorsprong | Handmade in Japan (Nara) |
| Beste vir | Scissor-over-comb, bulk removal, fades, blunt lines |
Yasaka Seiki has been making professional shears in Japan since 1951. The 7.0" barber model is their flagship for barbershops, and you'll find it in a lot of Australian barber kits for good reason. The extra blade length does real work during scissor-over-comb: more hair per stroke, cleaner coverage, fewer passes. Read the full Yasaka brand profile on ScissorPedia.
ATS-314 cobalt steel at 62 - 63 HRC puts this at the harder end of the professional range. That hardness translates directly to edge longevity: you'll get significantly more cutting time between sharpenings than you would with standard 440C. The clam-shaped convex edge slices through hair cleanly without pushing or dragging, which keeps fade blending smooth and blunt lines sharp.
If you're looking for one Japanese 7" shear and you want to know it'll hold up, this is the reference point everything else gets measured against.
| Hanteer | Master's Grip Geometry — Offset |
| Steel | ATS-314 Cobalt Steel |
| Hardheid | 62 - 63 HRC |
| Groottes | 6.0", 6.5", 7.0" |
| Blade | Angled Sword Blade + Precision Glide Convex |
| Spanning | Tokio-kogellagerstelsel |
| Voltooi | gepoleerde |
| Oorsprong | Made in Japan (Seki City) |
| Beste vir | Skin fades, tight detail work, slide cutting |
The sword blade angle on this shear was designed for one thing: visibility at the cutting point. When you're detailing around the ear or chasing a skin fade line, you can see exactly where the blade contacts the hair. No guesswork, no over-cutting. That visibility is what's won this model recognition across American Salon Pro's Choice, Beauty Launchpad, and Hairdresser Journal.
Same ATS-314 cobalt steel as the Yasaka above, same hardness bracket. Where it differs is the blade geometry. The sword angle combined with Juntetsu's Precision Glide Convex creates a more forward-moving cut. Barbers who do a lot of slide cutting tend to notice this straight away. The Tokyo Ball-Bearing tension system holds your setting through a full day without drifting.
Japan Scissors is the official AU/NZ reseller for Juntetsu. Pick 6.5" if you split your time between barbering and salon work. Go 7.0" if you're behind a barber chair all day.
| Hanteer | Offset — Kamisori Anatomic System |
| Steel | Japanese 440C Stainless Steel |
| Hardheid | 59 HRC |
| Groottes | 6.0 ", 6.5", 7.0 ", 7.5" |
| Blade | Kamisori Japanese 3D Convex + Angled Sword |
| Voltooi | gepoleerde |
| Hand | Links of regs |
| Beste vir | Scissor-over-comb, blunt cutting, dry cutting, slide cutting |
Kamisori built their reputation on aggressive blade engineering. The Sword is their barber flagship, and its status as a top seller globally is earned. The combination of angled sword blade and their proprietary 3D Convex edge gives you cutting power that straight-tip scissors just don't deliver on thick men's hair.
At 59 HRC it sits softer than the ATS-314 shears above, which means it sharpens up more easily and is more forgiving if you're not sending it to a Japanese-specialist sharpener. The 7.5" size is also unique to this model: the longest blade in this guide, for barbers who want maximum coverage in scissor-over-comb work.
Available for left-handers at no extra cost, which is worth noting when most premium shears make lefties jump through hoops.
| Hanteer | Offset Ergonomic (matched pair) |
| Steel | ATS-314 Cobalt Steel |
| Stel grootte | 7.0" Cutting + 7.0" Texturizing |
| Blade | Sword + Convex (cutting) / Texturizing (choice) |
| Oorsprong | Handgemaak in Tokio |
| Stock | Limited — direct Japan allocation |
| Beste vir | High-volume barbers wanting a complete matched 7" system |
Most barber scissor sets pair a 7" cutting shear with a smaller 6" texturizing shear. This one doesn't. Both scissors are 7.0", both use ATS-314 cobalt steel, both have the same ergonomic handle. The result is a fully matched system where switching between cutting and texturizing mid-haircut feels identical in the hand. No adjustment period, no shift in balance.
These are handcrafted in Tokyo and come in limited allocations direct from Japan. For barbers who take their tools seriously and want a flagship matched system, this is the cleanest option on this list.
Note: Original storage case is temporarily replaced with a Mina Dual Felt Travel Case due to Japan shipping delays.
| Hanteer | Offset + slim lightweight design |
| Steel | V10W Japanese Steel (ATS-314 class) |
| Groottes | 6.5 ", 7.0" |
| Blade | Fully Hollow Convex, Mirror-Polished |
| Wenke | Narrow rounded — precision-focused |
| Spanning | Skroeftipe verstelling |
| Voltooi | Mirror-Polished Silver |
| Beste vir | Slide cutting, precision cutting, detail work |
Kasho has been making professional shears in Japan for decades, and the Silver Offset is where their engineering shows most clearly. A fully hollow convex blade is ground differently from a standard convex: the hollow grind removes more material from the blade face, creating a thinner, sharper cutting edge. It's the same principle as a hollow-ground straight razor. The result is a finer, more responsive cut.
The narrow rounded tips give you more precision on close detail work than wider-tipped shears. Slim, lightweight body: this is the pick for barbers who notice scissor fatigue and want a shear that feels like it disappears in the hand. Available in 6.5" and 7.0" only, which keeps it focused on the barber size range.
Slide cutting and precision line work are where this shear earns its keep. Not the most aggressive power cutter, but one of the sharpest and most refined on this list.
| Hanteer | Afset |
| Steel | VG-10 Premium + 8-Layer Damascus |
| Groottes | 6.0 ", 6.5" |
| Blade | Samurai Sword Blade — sword/hollow upper, convex/hollow lower |
| Spanning | Flat Screw + Ball Bearings |
| Voltooi | Damascus pattern — unique per pair |
| Sert. | Individual Damascus pattern certificate |
| Beste vir | Precision cutting, slide cutting, texturizing |
Eight micro-layers of Damascus steel wrapped around a VG-10 core. Every pair has a unique pattern, and Kasho certifies it individually, which is unusual for a hair shear. The visual is striking, but the actual engineering point is the hybrid blade: a sword/hollow upper blade paired with a convex/hollow lower. Two different grinds working together. The combination gives you slide cutting precision with the power of a hollow upper blade.
The 6.5" size is the best pick for barbers: enough blade length for scissor-over-comb work, and the Damascus pattern on a 6.5" shear photographs well if that matters in your shop. The 6.0" sits at the boundary between salon and barber use.
If your tools are part of how you present yourself professionally, this one stands out from every other shear on this list. It performs at the level it looks.
| Hanteer | Classic / Traditional straight with removable finger rest |
| Steel | Supreme Japanese Stainless Alloy (Joewell eie) |
| Groottes | 4.5", 5.0", 5.5", 6.0", 6.5", 7.0" |
| Blade | Joewell Standard — All-Rounder |
| Voltooi | Satynafwerking |
| Lewensduur | 20+ years with proper care |
| Oorsprong | Handmade in Tokyo since 1917 |
| Beste vir | Every technique — the universal professional shear |
Joewell (Tokosha) has been making professional shears in Northern Japan since 1917. The Classic is their best-selling model, and it's been the best-selling model for over 50 years. Winning a 2017 Good Design Award after half a century of production doesn't happen without getting something fundamentally right about how a shear should work.
One thing to flag: the Classic uses a traditional straight handle rather than offset. That's a deliberate design choice, not a limitation. A lot of experienced barbers prefer traditional handles for scissor-over-comb: the straight grip gives them a different wrist angle that they find more natural for that specific technique. If you've always used offset and you're happy, stay with offset. But if you've been curious about traditional handles, the Joewell Classic at 6.5" or 7.0" is the right place to try it. For more on handle types and ergonomics, see our handles guide.
Competition stylists reach for Joewell because of the balance and consistency. These aren't the flashiest shears on this list. They're the ones you'll still be cutting with in 20 years.
| Hanteer | Afset |
| Steel | 440C Staal |
| Hardheid | 58 - 60 HRC |
| Groottes | 6.0", 6.5", 7.0" |
| Blade | Wide Double-Sharpened Convex Edge (katana-inspired) |
| Spanning | Key-adjusted |
| Voltooi | Spieël Pools |
| Beste vir | Blunt cutting, dry cutting, barbering, slide cutting |
The Katana profile here is wider than a standard scissor blade, and you feel it immediately. That extra blade width creates more cutting surface contact per stroke, which is the point for barbers working through dense or coarse hair. The double-sharpened convex edge reinforces that: both sides of the blade are ground, giving you cutting power from more angles.
At 440C with 58 - 60 HRC, this is a more accessible hardness than the ATS-314 shears above. That means it's easier to sharpen locally and slightly more forgiving if you're not obsessive about blade maintenance. Good daily driver for barbers who want the sword/katana profile without the premium price.
Worth noting: the blade profile is described as "wide" on the product. This isn't a slim, delicate shear. It's built for power work.
| Hanteer | Afset |
| Steel | 440C Staal |
| Hardheid | 58 - 60 HRC |
| Groottes | 6.0", 6.5", 7.0" |
| Blade | Powerful Angled Cutting Blade — Convex Edge |
| Spanning | Robust adjustment system with tension key |
| Voltooi | Spieël Pools |
| Beste vir | Scissor-over-comb, power cutting, extended sessions |
Dit is Ichiro's explicitly barber-designed model: the angled blade geometry is engineered for scissor-over-comb work and the kind of repetitive, controlled cutting that fills a barbershop day. The convex edge keeps it smooth and responsive. This isn't a repurposed salon shear with a barber price tag: the geometry is actually different.
Three full barber sizes (6", 6.5", 7") gives you flexibility. The robust tension adjustment system is built for barbers who dial their tension frequently. It holds position under pressure rather than drifting mid-haircut.
As u 'n Ichiro shear that's genuinely built for barbering rather than adapted for it, the Tsurugi is it.
| Hanteer | Afset |
| Steel | VG10 Japanese Steel |
| Groottes | Multiple incl. 6.0", 6.5" |
| Blade | Konvekse rand |
| Voltooi | gepoleerde |
| Beste vir | Everyday barbering, first professional pair, high-volume shops |
VG10 is a well-regarded blade steel: sharper and longer-lasting than standard 440C, more accessible in price than ATS-314 cobalt. The K10 is where Ichiro puts that steel in a clean, no-nonsense package. It holds a sharp convex edge reliably, it sharpens well, and it doesn't come with a premium price that makes you nervous every time you set it down.
The recommendation here is simple: if you're an apprentice barber buying your first proper pair, or a working barber who needs a reliable backup that won't break the budget, the K10 is the answer. It doesn't have the prestige of the Yasaka or the award history of the Juntetsu Sword, but it cuts clean, it holds up, and it makes sense at this stage in the game.
| Hanteer | Afset |
| Steel | VG10 Japanese Steel |
| Groottes | 6.5 ", 7.0" |
| Blade | Convex Edge — Sword Blade |
| Voltooi | gepoleerde |
| Beste vir | Slide cutting, blunt cuts, scissor-over-comb, seamless blending |
The Yuki is for barbers who want the sword blade profile without the ATS-314 price. VG10 steel is genuinely good: it holds a sharp convex edge longer than 440C, it responds well to sharpening, and the corrosion resistance is solid for a professional environment. The sword blade gives you the cutting geometry: angled tip, forward-moving cut, good visibility at the point.
Available in 6.5" and 7.0" only, keeping it in the barber size range. The 7.0" is the pick for scissor-over-comb and bulk work. The 6.5" suits barbers who also do some fade detail and want a more versatile middle-ground size. Slide cutting and seamless blending are where this shear is most at home.
| Hanteer | Afset |
| Steel | VG10 Japanese Steel |
| Groottes | 6.0", 6.5", 7.0" |
| Blade | Convex Edge + Slice Cutting Edge — Sword Blade |
| Spanning | Easy hand-adjustment |
| Voltooi | gepoleerde |
| Beste vir | Point cutting, slide cutting, scissor-over-comb |
The Moonlight Sword adds something the Yuki doesn't have: a slice cutting edge combined with the convex grind. That combination gives you a shear that's adaptable across more techniques. The convex handles your standard blunt and slide work, while the slice cutting geometry makes point cutting and texture work feel more natural. Three sizes including 6.0" give you the most flexibility in this part of the list.
A good option for barbers who also do occasional salon-style cuts. The 6.0" sits at the crossover point, and the combined edge type handles both worlds. The VG10 steel means the blades stay sharp longer than you'd expect at this price range.
| Hanteer | Offset (ergonomic) |
| Steel | VG10 Japanese Steel |
| Groottes | 6.0", 6.5", 7.0" |
| Blade | Konvekse rand |
| Voltooi | gepoleerde |
| Beste vir | Everyday barbering, all-round use |
The Ergo Barber is Juntetsu's most straightforwardly barber-positioned model. Most shears at this price point ship with a pouch and cloth. The Ergo Barber includes a styling razor with blades, a comb, and scissor oil. For a barber setting up their kit or wanting to add a razor without a separate purchase, that's genuinely useful.
The shear itself is a solid VG10 convex edge with full barber sizes. It's a no-drama, all-day cutter: ergonomic offset handle, lightweight construction, smooth cutting without tugging. This is a good choice if you want a reliable Juntetsu shear specifically designed around barbering use and value the full kit over buying accessories separately.
| Hanteer | Offset with angled thumb ring |
| Steel | Stainless Chromium Steel (German — Solingen) |
| Groottes | 6.5 ", 7.0" |
| Blade | Classic Blade — Micro Serration |
| Voltooi | Satynafwerking |
| gewig | 35g — lightest on this list |
| Spanning | Jaguar Vario Screw Connection |
| Oorsprong | Made in Germany (Solingen) |
| Beste vir | Scissor-over-comb on fine/slippery hair, durability-focused barbers |
Jaguar Solingen has been making professional shears in Germany since 1956. The Pre Style Relax P is the barber configuration of their most popular series: 6.5" and 7.0" only, offset handle, satin finish. At 35g it's the lightest shear on this list by a meaningful margin, which adds up over a long day.
The micro serration edge is different from the convex Japanese shears above. Serrated edges grip hair slightly during the cut rather than slicing cleanly through. For scissor-over-comb on fine or slippery hair that tends to slide away from a smooth convex blade, that grip can be an advantage. Micro serrations also hold their functional sharpness longer between professional sharpenings, since the serrations maintain some bite even as the flat edge dulls slightly.
German scissors are generally more forgiving to maintain than Japanese convex blades. If you're not yet working with a specialist Japanese sharpener, or you want a shear that tolerates real-world barbershop use without demanding obsessive care, this is the pick.
| Hanteer | Offset with angled thumb ring |
| Steel | Stainless Chromium Steel (German — Solingen) |
| Cutting Sizes | 6.5" or 7.0" (your choice) |
| dunner | 6.0" — 43 teeth |
| Blade | Micro Serration (cutting) + 43T (thinning) |
| Voltooi | Satynafwerking |
| Oorsprong | Made in Germany (Solingen) |
| Beste vir | Barbers who need cutting + texturizing in one matched purchase |
Same German engineering as the Pre Style Relax P above, but packaged as a complete barber set with a 6.0" thinning shear at 43 teeth. The thinning scissor is where this set earns its place on the list. 43 teeth is a relatively fine count, which means it removes weight gradually and blends without leaving harsh lines. Good for fade blending and removing bulk without over-thinning.
The matching satin finish on both shears is a minor thing but it matters: a matched set looks professional and the ergonomics are consistent between scissors, so switching mid-haircut is seamless. If you're looking to add a texturizing tool to complement a German cutting shear without buying separately, this set handles both in one go.
How to Choose Your Barber Shears
grootte
Barbers run longer than hairdressers. Most salon stylists use 5.0" - 5.5". Barbering is different: scissor-over-comb, fade blending, and bulk removal on shorter men's hair all benefit from more blade length. The standard barber range is 6.0" - 7.0". Start at 6.5" if you're buying your first professional pair. Move to 7.0" when you know you want the extra coverage. The 6.0" is the crossover size, comfortable for barbers who also do salon work.
Steel
ATS-314 cobalt and VG10 are the two main Japanese steel types here. ATS-314 (Yasaka, Juntetsu Sword, Mastersmith) hardens to 62 - 63 HRC: sharper edge, longer life, needs a specialist sharpener. VG10 (Ichiro K10, Juntetsu Yuki, Moonlight, Ergo) is slightly softer but still excellent, more accessible to sharpen. German chromium (Jaguar) is tougher, more forgiving, better for barbers not yet working with Japanese-specialist sharpeners. 440C (Kamisori Swaard, Ichiro Tsurugi, Katana) sits between Japanese and German: affordable, reliable. For a detailed comparison, see the ScissorPedia steel reference.
Soort lemme
Convex edge is the Japanese standard: sharpest cut, zero drag, best for slide cutting and precision work. Hollow convex (Kasho Silver) is even sharper, a thinner grind and more refined cut. Micro serration (Jaguar) grips hair during the cut, which suits fine or slippery hair and scissor-over-comb. Sword blades, available on the Juntetsu Sword, Kamisori Sword, Yuki, Moonlight, and Ichiro Katana, are angled at the tip for better visibility during detail work. All Japanese convex blades need a specialist water-stone sharpener. Don't send them to a standard sharpener. Find one near you in the ScissorPedia AU sharpening directory.
Hanteer posisie
Every shear on this list uses an offset handle except the Joewell Classic, which uses a traditional straight handle. Offset keeps your elbow and wrist in a more natural position during scissor-over-comb and reduces long-term strain. Traditional handles give some barbers a different wrist angle they prefer specifically for scissor-over-comb. It's personal. The Joewell Classic at 6.5" or 7.0" is the right place to try traditional if you're curious. Read more about handle types in our handles guide.
Barber shears FAQ
What size barber shears should I get?
Most barbers use 6.5" to 7.0" shears. The extra blade length over salon scissors (typically 5.0" to 5.5") gives you more coverage per stroke during scissor-over-comb work. Start at 6.5" if you split time between barbering and salon work. Go 7.0" if you're behind a barber chair full-time.
What is the best steel for barber scissors?
ATS-314 cobalt steel (used in Yasaka, Juntetsu Sword, and Kasho) offers the best edge retention at 62 - 63 HRC. VG10 (used in Ichiro K10, Juntetsu Yuki) is a strong mid-range option that sharpens more easily. German chromium steel (Jaguar) is the most forgiving to maintain and suits barbers who don't yet use a Japanese-specialist sharpener.
What is the difference between convex and serrated barber shears?
Convex edge (Japanese standard) slices through hair cleanly with zero drag, ideal for slide cutting and precision work. Micro serrated edge (German standard, used by Jaguar) grips hair slightly during the cut, which helps with scissor-over-comb on fine or slippery hair. Convex needs a specialist sharpener. Serrated holds functional sharpness longer between sharpenings.
Are barber scissors tax deductible in Australia?
Yes. Professional hairdressing and barber scissors are a tax-deductible business expense for Australian barbers and hairdressers. Keep your receipt from japanscissors.com.au for your annual tax return.
How often should barber shears be sharpened?
Every 500 to 700 haircuts, or roughly every 3 to 6 months for a full-time barber. Always use a sharpener who specialises in convex-edge hairdressing scissors. A general knife sharpener can damage the blade geometry. See the ScissorPedia sharpening directory for verified Australian sharpeners.
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