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Throwing Knives — Balanced Sport Throwers for Competition, Training & Martial Arts

A throwing knife is a fixed blade purpose-built for rotational flight and target impact — not a standard knife repurposed for throwing. Knifeworks carries throwing knives from Cold Steel, United Cutlery, and other makers: single throwers and multi-piece sets, beginner-friendly designs and competition-grade tools, blade-heavy and handle-heavy balance profiles for different throwing distances and techniques. Every throwing knife at Knifeworks is sourced through authorized dealer channels with full manufacturer warranty. Browse by balance, weight, blade length, and set size. Questions? Call 888-225-9775.

Throwing Knives

Purpose-Built Throwers — Not Repurposed BladesEvery throwing knife at Knifeworks is designed specifically for rotational flight and target impact — with the weight distribution, blade geometry, and robust construction that throwing demands. Not standard knives pressed into service.
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Singles & Sets — Beginner to CompetitionIndividual throwers for experienced practitioners, 3-piece and 6-piece sets for beginners and practice, competition-grade knives for tournament throwing. Balance profiles for no-spin, half-spin, and full-rotation techniques.
Authorized Dealer — Full WarrantyEvery throwing knife at Knifeworks is sourced through authorized manufacturer channels. Full manufacturer warranty on every brand. Cold Steel, United Cutlery, and all others — genuine products, full coverage.
Fast Shipping + Expert HelpMost orders ship same or next business day from Columbia, Louisiana. Questions about balance, weight, or technique compatibility? Call 888-225-9775 — we know the throwing knife catalog.

Throwing Knife Buyer's Guide — How to Choose the Right Thrower

Throwing knives are a purpose-built category with specific requirements that separate a genuine thrower from a standard knife. This guide covers what makes a throwing knife work, balance types and techniques, what beginners need, and how to choose by use case. Click any topic to expand.

What Makes a Throwing Knife — The 4 Design Requirements+

A purpose-built throwing knife differs from a standard fixed blade knife in four specific ways. Using a standard knife for throwing is both ineffective and dangerous — the design requirements are meaningfully different:

  • No separate handle distinction: A throwing knife has no traditional handle with scales or grips. The entire knife — blade and "handle" — is a single piece of steel. This is essential: a conventional knife with a separate handle will shed its scales or grip material on impact. A true thrower is a single steel unit that takes impacts without component failure.
  • Engineered balance point: The center of mass is deliberately positioned to produce stable rotational flight. Blade-heavy knives are designed for handle-grip throws (blade rotates forward); handle-heavy knives for blade-grip throws. No-spin throwers are balanced for straight flight without rotation. The balance point is the primary specification that determines technique compatibility.
  • Appropriate weight: Throwing knives typically weigh 200–300g (7–11 oz). Lighter knives lose energy too quickly in flight; heavier knives require more throwing force and are harder to control for beginners. Competition throwing knives are typically 200–250g for standard distances.
  • Robust steel and construction: Throwing knives take repeated impact against targets — the steel must absorb this stress without chipping, bending, or fracturing. Most quality throwers use 420 or 1055 carbon steel in a full-tang single-piece design. High-hardness premium steels are not ideal for throwing — they are more brittle under impact.
Never Throw a Standard EDC or Hunting Knife Standard folding knives, hunting knives with separate handle scales, and high-hardness EDC blades are not designed for throwing and will fail — either by shedding handle material on impact, chipping at the blade tip, or bending at the tang junction. A purpose-built throwing knife costs $15–$60 and is the only safe and effective option for throwing practice.
Throwing Knife Balance, Rotation & Technique — Blade-Heavy vs. Handle-Heavy vs. No-Spin+

The balance profile of a throwing knife determines which grip and throwing technique it is designed for. Understanding this is the most important buying decision after overall quality:

Balance Type How It's Thrown Rotation Best Distance Best For
Blade-Heavy Gripped by the handle end; blade leads during release One rotation per throw (typically) Short to medium — 10–15 feet Beginners learning half-spin technique; most beginner sets are blade-heavy
Handle-Heavy Gripped by the blade end; handle leads during release One rotation per throw (typically) Medium — 12–20 feet Intermediate throwers; competitions using blade-grip technique
Balanced (Center) Gripped by either end; allows multiple rotation distances Variable — adjustable by distance Variable — most versatile Experienced throwers; competition use; adjusting rotation by stepping forward or back
No-Spin Specific grip and wrist technique; blade travels straight without rotation No rotation — straight flight Any distance — distance-independent Advanced technique; Cold Steel's Perfect Balance throwers are designed for no-spin
For Beginners: Start with Blade-Heavy Throwers at 10–12 Feet The easiest throwing technique for beginners is the half-rotation throw from 10–12 feet with a blade-heavy knife gripped at the handle end. The knife makes a half-rotation and the blade arrives point-first at the target. This technique is forgiving of minor inconsistencies in release and is how the vast majority of new throwers develop their foundation. A set of three identical blade-heavy throwers at this distance is the right starting point.
Beginner's Guide to Throwing Knives — What to Buy, How to Start, and Safety Rules+

What to buy: Start with a set of 3 identical throwers in the 200–250g range with a blade-heavy or center balance profile. Sets of three are standard because you can throw a series without walking to retrieve after each throw. Cold Steel's Perfect Balance throwers and United Cutlery's Gil Hibben sets are the two most popular beginner options at Knifeworks.

Target setup: A softwood target is essential — end-grain sections of pine, cottonwood, or similar soft wood. The knife must penetrate and stick; a hard target (hardwood, metal, synthetic) will cause the blade to bounce back unpredictably, which is a safety hazard. A target 12"–18" in diameter and 6"+ thick is standard for practice.

Safety rules that are non-negotiable:

  • Never throw toward anyone. Establish a clear throwing lane with no one downrange.
  • Never retrieve a knife until throwing is completely stopped and the range is clear.
  • Keep a clear zone behind the target — a bounced or missed throw travels past the target.
  • Throw only dedicated throwing knives — never standard EDC or hunting knives.

Developing consistency: The fundamental skill in knife throwing is a consistent release — the blade must leave the hand at the same point in each throw to produce the same rotation. Start close (8–10 feet), focus on the release point, and work on consistency before increasing distance. Distance is meaningless without a reproducible release.

Top Throwing Knife Brands — Cold Steel, United Cutlery & More+
Brand Known For Price Range Key Models
Cold Steel The most recognized throwing knife brand — Perfect Balance series designed for no-spin technique; heavy-gauge steel; single-piece construction; used by competitive throwers worldwide $15–$60 each or per set Perfect Balance Thrower, Pro Balance, True Flight Thrower
United Cutlery Gil Hibben-designed throwing knives — well-balanced sets favored by beginners; attractive presentation; broad blade profiles; competitively priced sets of 3 $20–$50 per set Gil Hibben Throwing Set, Hibben Competition Thrower
Smith & Wesson Accessible entry-level throwing sets; 3-piece and 6-piece kits; budget-friendly introduction to the category $15–$35 per set S&W 3-piece and 6-piece throwing knife sets
Best Starting Point: Cold Steel Perfect Balance or Gil Hibben Set of 3 Cold Steel's Perfect Balance thrower is the most consistently recommended competition and practice thrower — the weight, balance, and single-piece construction represent the correct design for serious practice. For beginners who want a lower-cost entry, the Gil Hibben 3-piece set from United Cutlery delivers a well-balanced beginner thrower at an accessible price with the aesthetics that make the category appealing.
Choosing a Throwing Knife — Quick Reference by Use Case+
Use Case Recommended Type Key Specs
Complete beginner — first throwing knives 3-piece blade-heavy set (Gil Hibben or Smith & Wesson) 3 identical knives; blade-heavy balance; 200–250g each; under $40 for the set
Intermediate practice / developing technique Cold Steel Perfect Balance Thrower (set of 3) Center-balanced for multiple distances; single-piece 1055 carbon steel; takes no-spin technique well
Competition throwing Cold Steel Perfect Balance or Pro Balance Competition-standard weight; consistent balance; durable enough for high-volume practice sessions
Martial arts / ninjutsu training Traditional shuriken-style or Cold Steel thrower Lightweight; purpose-built for throwing technique training; verify local laws
Gift / display Gil Hibben presentation set Attractive blade design; presentation-quality finish; set format; under $50

Throwing Knives — Frequently Asked Questions

Expert answers from the Knifeworks team on the most common throwing knife questions — what to buy, how to start, technique, safety, and legality.

What is the best throwing knife for beginners?+

For beginners, buy a set of 3 identical throwing knives in the blade-heavy or center-balanced category. Sets of 3 are important because you can throw a series before retrieving. The United Cutlery Gil Hibben 3-piece set and Cold Steel's Perfect Balance throwers are the two most recommended starting points — both are purpose-built throwers in the right weight range (200–250g), available at accessible prices, and used by experienced practitioners who also recommend them for beginners.

Can you throw a regular knife?+

You should not. Standard knives — folding knives, hunting knives with separate handle scales, and high-hardness EDC blades — are not designed for throwing and will fail under repeated impact. Handle scales shed from the frame, blade tips chip on contact with hard targets, and tang junctions can fail under repeated throwing stress. Purpose-built throwing knives cost $15–$60 and are the correct tool — their single-piece construction, impact-appropriate steel hardness, and engineered balance make them both more effective and significantly safer than throwing a conventional knife.

Are throwing knives legal?+

Throwing knives are legal to purchase and own in most US jurisdictions — they are fixed blade knives with no restricted mechanism. Carry laws vary by state and locality; some jurisdictions impose blade length limits for concealed carry of fixed blades. Throwing knives are primarily used in sport and practice contexts where carry laws are rarely relevant. Always verify the knife laws in your specific state and locality. Knifeworks cannot provide legal advice.

What is no-spin throwing technique?+

No-spin (or non-rotation) throwing technique sends the knife to the target in a straight line without the blade rotating. The knife leaves the hand with the blade pointing forward and arrives at the target in the same orientation — no distance calculation required for rotation. This technique requires a specific release and wrist motion and is more consistent across variable distances than rotation throwing. Cold Steel's Perfect Balance throwers are specifically designed with no-spin technique in mind, and Cold Steel produces instructional content on the technique to accompany their throwers.

What target do I need for throwing knives?+

Softwood is the only appropriate target material — end-grain sections of pine, cottonwood, or similar soft wood that allow the blade to penetrate and stick cleanly. A target 12"–18" in diameter and at least 6" thick is the standard setup. Hard targets (hardwood, synthetic, metal) cause blades to bounce back unpredictably, which is a safety hazard. Commercial knife throwing targets are also available. Ensure there is a clear safety zone behind the target for missed or bounced throws.

How far do you throw a throwing knife?+

Beginners typically start at 8–12 feet, which produces approximately a half-rotation with a blade-heavy thrower. As technique develops, throwers move back in approximately 5-foot increments to add full rotations. Competition distances in the American Knife Throwers Alliance (AKTA) typically range from 10 to 20 feet depending on the event. No-spin technique is distance-independent — the same release works at any distance, which is one of the reasons it is favored by practitioners who don't want to calculate rotation distance.

Sport Throwing · Competition · Martial Arts · Cold Steel · United Cutlery · Authorized Dealer

Purpose-Built Throwers. Every Level. One Authorized Source.

Browse the complete Knifeworks throwing knife catalog — Cold Steel Perfect Balance, Gil Hibben sets, Smith & Wesson sets, and more, all sourced through authorized channels with full manufacturer warranty. Beginner 3-piece sets to competition-grade individual throwers. Questions? Call 888-225-9775. Fast shipping from Columbia, Louisiana.

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