Survival Knife Review: the Mora
by Leon Pantenburg
Currently, the rage among some survival schools is the Mora, a small, inexpensive Scandinavian-style sheath knife with a four-inch blade and a large, easy-to-hold

The Cold Steel SRK (top) and the J. Martinni Mora-style knives are good choices for all around use. Combined with a Swiss Army Classic, they can provide a good survival tool kit.
handle. Personally, I think they’re great, and I generally have a Mora close at hand.
It’s all because newspaper guys, like me, research stuff. Sometimes we gather information, statistics and data for no apparent reason, and with a vague idea of what the info might be someday be used for.
That was the case several years ago when I bought my first Mora knife. Frosts Carbon Clipper Utility Knife
While I will never give up my folders, I was looking for a small, inexpensive sheath knife that could be recommended to Boy Scouts.
The knife had to be an all-around, do-everything tool. It would be used for a variety of tasks, which could include whittling, cleaning fish and small game, meat-cutting and peeling potatoes. It needed to be lightweight and small enough to be carried conveniently.
Practicality was paramount: A fighting knife was not in the running. I didn’t anticipate the do-everything knife would ever be thrown, used in a “tactical” application, as a prybar or as a weapon for stabbing bears.
Because you can get excellent Frost brand Moro knives for prices ranging from $10 to $15, I bought several versions and put them through their paces. Mora Craftline TopQ Allround Knife Stainless Steel
I got this background info on Mora knives from Ragnar’s Ragweed Forge:
The town of Mora, Sweden has been a knife-making center for centuries. Smiths in Mora developed a basic, functional style that became known as the “Mora Knife.” Until recently there were two remaining large companies in Mora, K.J. Eriksson and Frosts of Mora. They have merged into “Mora of Sweden.”
Mora knives place function before style. They have the flat Scandinavian grind that goes cleanly to the edge, and come from the factory very sharp.

The stainless steel Clipper, top, and the Frost Carbon Clipper Utility Knife are good choices for cleaning fish and/or small game.
A Mora specialty is the laminated carbon blade. This is a three-part sandwich, with a core of high carbon steel protected by sides of tough lower carbon steel.
Normally, my knife testing takes a while, and I focus on practical tasks the knife might be used for. Several different Mora variations were ran through these tests:
- Paper cutting: An everyday carry knife is used for whatever task is at hand. For me, that might involve opening mail! I cut a bunch of paper up to make notebooks with a Mora, and after about half an hour of constant cutting, the edge was still reasonably sharp.
- Meat Cutting: The Moras worked well for boning and trimming the meat of several elk and a couple of deer. The blades held an edge well, and were easy to re-sharpen with a whetstone and my grandfather’s butchering steel.
- Cleaning fish: For panfish or other small, eating-sized fish, I usually cut off the heads and gut them. Then the fish are frozen in water. A Frost Mora easily got through a limit of eight medium-sized trout last week, while maintaining a shaving-sharp edge. The soft, smushy handle never got too slippery to use.
- Cleaning upland and small game: The Mora style is superb for taking care of a limit of chuckers, pheasants, rabbits and squirrels. The three-to-four inch blade, and easy-to-hold handle work just right.
- Whittling weiner sticks: The first practical wood carving most of us do is probably a stick to roast wieners, brats or marsh mellows over a campfire. The Mora works fantastically well for this, and is a good knife to loan the kids for that project. You don’t have to worry about a beginner folding the blade over on a finger!
- Spreading peanut butter or cutting up apples: On my 1980 Mississippi River canoe trip, these proved to be the most common tasks my Buck folder was used for. Any practical survival knife must also be able to handle the less-glamorous tasks!
- Kitchen Use: I’ll generally keep the knife being tested on the magnetic knife rack in my kitchen and use it for awhile. This everyday use will quickly point out features you do and don’t like. The Mora is incredibly useful for just about any kitchen task.
- Ease of Carry: While I generally carry my knife in my daypack, it must also be comfortable to carry on a belt. The traditional Scandinavian sheath, which dangles from a belt loop, is incredibly comfortable to carry. The “clipper” plastic sheaths, which clip on a belt, are not so comfortable.

After cleaning an eight-trout limit the handle on this Moro-style carbon clipper utility knife was still easy to grasp and use safely.
While a Mora can do many things well, my first choice for gutting a deer or elk is still my much-used Cold Steel SRK. SRK, Kraton Handle, Black Blade, Concealex Sheath
And a Moro doesn’t have the tweezers, scissors, and toothpick of my beloved Swiss Army Classic!Victorinox Swiss Army Tinker and Classic Knife Combo
While you could split kindling or baton a Mora to cut firewood, it isn’t the best choice. An axe is! Gerber 42730 Extra Large Axe
And I wouldn’t want to have to dig a very big hole with a Mora, or any other knife, for that matter!
The Mora’s low price is a major attraction. You can get a superb knife for under $20, making a Moro a great choice for inclusion in survival caches, Bug Out Bags or other survivalist and prepper stashes. And several Moros would make a great investment now, for bartering later.
A Mora can do about 90 percent of what I need an outdoor knife to do. And while I’ve yet to find the ultimate, do-everything wilderness survival knife, a Mora can come really close!
Recommended Reading:
Surviving a Wilderness Emergency
Build the Perfect Survival Kit
For more related SurvivalCommonSense.com tips and stories, click on the highlighted words:
- STOP: Use this exercise to reduce stress and focus your thoughts.
- Write a note to let people know where you went, before you left.
- Take your Ten Essentials on every outing.
- Dress with the right fabrics.
- Have a plan to make a tarp shelter.
- Carry lightweight, compact firestarter.
- Find the most effective fire ignition system.
- How to make charcloth, a material that can catch a spark from any source.
- Use charcloth as an effective method of catching a spark to make a fire.
- It can kill you: Hypothermia
- Hardtack: A great emergency food
- About Leon Pantenburg


I got the spelling of Mora right on the town, first reference to the knife and screwed up several other references. Thanks for pointing that out. There is no excuse for such a bonehead mistake, and I stand corrected, along with the story!
This is the statement (I think) you call “absurd”: “While you could split kindling or baton a Mora to cut firewood, it isn’t the best choice. An axe is!”
? Makes sense to me and several other readers. An axe is the best choice to split kindling in the context of this article. I never implied you couldn’t use a Mora to baton kindling.
I agree with your comment about the axe vs. saw.
I’m one of those people who prefer a saw to an axe in a survival kit. Here’s the story I did on that: http://survivalcommonsense.com/2010/04/20/axe-or-sawfeed/
This statement (from the same article) was intentionally absurd:
“Practicality was paramount: A fighting knife was not in the running. I didn’t anticipate the do-everything knife would ever be thrown, used in a “tactical” application, as a prybar or as a weapon for stabbing bears.”
You wouldn’t believe the absurd requirements some people put on their survival knives! Subsequently, the “practicality” remark.
Thanks for the feedback!
Leon
To the author of the article. The knife is Mora. The town is Mora. Not Moro.
@dustin: The Izula is a totally different animal. That coating will most likely interfere with wood carving, which is one of the many uses of Mora knives. The grind is completely different also. The blade shape is different. The Moras people have fallen in love with are more durable than some people are giving them credit for. Look for “iawoodsman” on youtube and his video on cutting down trees with a mora. The second method he uses is cringeworthy, but it worked. Obviously, if given a choice, I wouldn’t want just ONE knife of any kind if I were stuck out in the wilderness, but a Mora would be able to do more than you think. As for the sheaths, how many people don’t replace the stock sheaths that come with much more expensive knives with custom kydex ones? One of the top complaints of most production knives is “Yeah, I don’t like the sheath. blah, blah, blah.)” That argument doesn’t even hold water. Neither do Mora sheaths, btw.
@Leon: do you hear how absurd your first sentence is? One does not buy an axe for the purpose of batoning. One buys an axe to avoid batoning. However, there are times when swinging an axe (or even carrying one) might not be practical, and even a Mora is capable of being batoned through wood if one uses the proper technique. BTW, lots of people even prefer folding saws to axes for the speed, weight and safety.
Thank you for reading!
Victorinox makes a great knife for just about any application, and I am rarely without one on my person! Among my favorites are the Classic, the Tinker, and the Huntsman. I like the very functional saw on the Huntsman and the 3-inch locking blade, plus the tweezers, bottle opener, can opener and toothpick!
Victorinox Swiss Army Ranger Pocket Knife is a greatknife to use while hiking/camping. The ammount and versatility of the attatchments is useful for all applications thus far encountered.It’s light weight and small size enables it to be carried on treks where those factors are important.
I think the Gator it is one of the knives “Bear” uses in some of his shows. I have used it for years and really like it, but am waiting for the SCS review.
I agree. But if I’m buying a tool for the purpose of batoning, I’ll get an axe. My hard use knife is the cold Steel SRK, and I’ve yet to find anythig thing better. But it sure is fun looking. Currently, I’m testing the Gerber Gator with the 3 inch blade. So far, it’s done great on paper cutting and cleaning fish!
Thanks for the feedback!
Mora.
They are popular in survival schools because they are inexpensive, made of high carbon steel (produce a spark when struck against flint/basalt/ferro rod, etc.), some models float, they are often scandi-grind (meaning they can excel at slicing, carving and performing many bushcraft techniques), and are easy to sharpen.
For a survival fixed-blade, a Mora is a fine companion knife, but you really want something that is full tang.
If the knife is not heavy/long enough to serve as a chopper you also want something that can stand up to batoning better than a Mora.
Moras also have sheaths that leave a LOT to be desired.
I like my Mora, but frankly it is not tough enough for me to use solely.
My hard use knife is the ESEE5, with a DPx HEST backup.
If you want something the size of a Mora, but a bit more durable, go with the ESEE Izula.