The Katana Buying Guide: What Actually Matters Before You Spend a Dollar
Most people get this wrong. They search for a katana, find something that looks right, and order based on photos. Then the blade arrives, they hold it for thirty seconds, and something feels off. The geometry is wrong. The handle wobbles. The edge rolls on the first cut. That is a disappointing way to spend two or three hundred dollars.
This guide exists so that does not happen to you.
We are based in Longquan, which has produced swords continuously for over 2,600 years. Our forge team handles blades every day, and we have seen what separates a sword that performs from one that disappoints. Steel type, heat treatment, handle construction, hardware fit – each decision compounds. Get three of them right and you have a good blade. Get all of them right and you have something worth passing on.
Read this before you buy. It will save you money, and it will get you the right blade the first time.









