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Filter Emergency Knives · Knives & Tools · Rescue, EMS & Automotive

Emergency Knives
Gerber Crisis Hook, Strap Cutter & Ruike Rescue Knives

Specialised knives and rescue tools for emergencies – from the Gerber Crisis Hook Knife with protected hook blade for cutting clothing and belts, through the Gerber Strap Cutter as dedicated rescue tool, to the Ruike M195 rescue knife with glass breaker and seatbelt cutter. For EMS, fire department, automotive and first aid kit. Freely available in Switzerland, stocked in Menzingen.

What defines an emergency knife?
  • Specialised rescue functions: hook blade, glass breaker, seatbelt cutter, strap cutter
  • Protected blades to prevent injury to the victim during cutting
  • Compact format: many folding knives and smaller fixed blades for EDC capability
  • Blade lengths 6 to 12 cm – designed for rescue, not for outdoor batoning
  • Multiple steel grades: 14C28N, 12C27, D2, Beta+ – all stainless for emergency storage
  • Freely available in Switzerland, no justified reason required (Article 4 Weapons Act)

What is an emergency knife?

The emergency knife is the specialist branch for urban rescue use: designed for EMS personnel, fire department, police and private individuals who need a targeted tool for emergencies in the car, in the first aid kit or as EDC. Characteristic are not large blades for batoning, but protected hook blades, dedicated seatbelt cutters and compact folders with integrated glass breaker. The central design philosophy: the tool must be quickly available, one-hand operable and deployable without injury risk to the person being rescued.

If you need a robust tool with a large blade and outdoor survival properties in the forest or wilderness, a survival knife with Full Tang and MOLLE sheath is the focused choice. If you generally look for a fixed blade for outdoor tasks, check the fixed blade category. For pure EDC with Swiss-pocket-knife character, look at one-handed knives or folding knives. The emergency knife is the dedicated rescue variant: more specialised than a normal EDC folder, more compact than an outdoor survival knife, with targeted functions for medical emergencies or vehicle extrication.

Emergency functions at a glance

The emergency knives in our range combine five central rescue functions, often in a single tool:

FunctionPurposeIn our range
Hook bladeProtected hook shape, cuts clothing, belts and fabric safely without injuring the skinGerber Crisis Hook Knife
Strap cutterDedicated tool or integrated hook blade on blade or handle – cuts seatbelts and ropesGerber Strap Cutter Rescue Tool, Ruike M195
Glass breaker (striking pommel)Hardened steel pommel at the end of the handle, shatters safety glass in emergency situationsRuike M195, Ruike LD43 rescue knife
Serrated bladeAggressively cuts through ropes, plastic and tough material faster than plain bladesRuike LD series folders, Gerber Strap Cutter
One-hand operationThumb stud, flipper or hook blade allows opening with one hand – the other holds the patientAll Ruike folding knives in our range

Not every emergency knife has all five functions. The Gerber Crisis Hook Knife is highly specialised on the hook blade and is designed as an EMS knife. The Ruike M195 rescue knife is the all-rounder with glass breaker, seatbelt cutter and drop-point blade. The Ruike LD43 is the specialised folding rescue knife with serration and one-hand operation. For EDC with emergency reserve, the Ruike LD and P folding knives are suitable.

Use cases and matching models

Depending on the field of use, different emergency knives are suitable:

Field of useRequirementRecommended model
EMS / emergency servicesHook blade for clothing, one-handed, no injury riskGerber Crisis Hook Knife
Fire department / first aidersSeatbelt cutter, glass breaker, robust bladeRuike M195 rescue knife
Car bug-out / vehicle extricationGlass breaker, seatbelt cutter, compact in glove compartmentRuike LD43 rescue knife, Ruike M195
First aid kit / travel bagDedicated strap cutter, small and safely stowableGerber Strap Cutter Rescue Tool
EDC with emergency reserveAll-purpose folder with serration optionRuike LD series (LD11, LD21, LD31)
Outdoor survival with rescue aspectFixed blade, Full Tang, larger bladeGerber LMF II Infantry, Ruike F186

Blade steel and care

For emergency knives, steel selection is more important than for pure outdoor knives: the tool often sits unused in the first aid kit, glove compartment or duty belt for months. Three requirements are central: corrosion resistance (no carbon), edge retention (tough materials like belts and composite clothing are hard on the blade) and simple resharpenability (in use, there is no time for elaborate sharpening systems).

  • 14C28N (Sandvik) – Ruike standard. Low-maintenance, balanced all-rounder with good edge retention and easy sharpenability. First choice for emergency knives.
  • D2 tool steel – Ruike F186. Very edge-retentive, cuts aggressively. However slightly rust-prone – only recommended in emergency setup with regular care.
  • Beta+ (Ruike proprietary recipe) – In the LD and P series. Improved toughness over 14C28N, good properties for EDC with emergency reserve.
  • 12C27 (Sandvik) – In more affordable folders. Solid stainless choice in the mid-range, easy to maintain.

Important: Carbon steel is not recommended in the emergency knife segment. It rusts without regular care, and in an emergency, time is typically missing. All recommended emergency knives are made of stainless steels.

What to look for when buying

Six factors decide which emergency knife fits your use:

  • Level of specialisation – Dedicated rescue tool (Crisis Hook, Strap Cutter) for professionals, all-purpose emergency knife (Ruike M195) for broad use, or EDC folder (Ruike LD11) with emergency reserve.
  • Hook blade or straight blade – Hook blade is safer when cutting directly on the body, straight blade more versatile. Professional EMS choose hook blade; generalists the straight blade.
  • Folder or fixed blade – Folder is more compact and more practical in EDC, fixed blade is more quickly available and more robust. For the first aid kit a folder is enough; for the duty belt rather a fixed blade.
  • Glass breaker – Indispensable in the car setup. Ruike M195 and LD43 have one integrated; the Gerber Crisis Hook Knife does not, as it is a pure EMS knife.
  • Blade steel – Stainless (14C28N, Beta+, 12C27) is mandatory in the emergency setup. Carbon is unsuitable here.
  • Carrying system – Belt clip for EDC, Kydex sheath for duty belt, MOLLE for vest mounting.

For a complete overview of all knives, look at the main category Knives & Tools; related filters under survival knives, outdoor & survival knives and one-handed knives.

Brands in our range

Gerber – specialised rescue tools

Gerber Gear (Portland, Oregon, USA, since 1939) is represented in the emergency knife range with three clearly profiled models. The Crisis Hook Knife is the EMS specialist tool with protected hook blade – designed primarily for EMS personnel and first aiders who must safely cut clothing, belts or bandages without injuring the patient’s skin. The Strap Cutter Rescue Tool is the dedicated seatbelt cutter without a blade in the classic sense – pure rescue instrument for fire department, EMS and car bug-out. The LMF II Infantry Coyote rounds out the range as a robust all-round emergency and survival knife.

Ruike – Chinese rescue and EDC specialist

Ruike (founded 2014) is the second key brand in the emergency knife cluster and dominates the folder segment in the range. Specialists: the M195 rescue knife with integrated glass breaker and seatbelt cutter as a tactical rescue tool, and the LD43 rescue knife as a folding rescue knife. The extensive EDC lines LD series (LD11, LD21, LD31, LD32, LD41, LD42, LD51) and P series (P127, P831, P873, P875) offer folding knives in different sizes with partial serration – ideal for EDC with emergency reserve. Steel is mostly 14C28N or Beta+; processing mid-range with excellent price-performance ratio.

Camillus, Morakniv & others

Camillus (USA, since 1876) complements with the Animal outdoor knife and the GB-8B folding knife. Morakniv is represented with the Mora 2000 S Hi-Vis Orange drive-hunt/mushroom knife – thanks to the signal colour clearly visible in the first aid kit or rescue backpack. Nitecore delivers with the NTK10 titanium knife an extremely light mini folder for discreet EDC with rescue aspect.

Who is an emergency knife made for?

  • ✓ EMS personnel, rescue services and first aiders with hook-blade requirements
  • ✓ Fire department and mountain rescue with glass breaker and seatbelt cutter needs
  • ✓ Drivers as a rescue tool in the glove compartment or trunk emergency kit
  • ✓ Preppers as a complement to first aid equipment
  • ✓ Outdoor enthusiasts and mountaineers as a specialised rescue tool alongside the outdoor knife
  • ✓ EDC users with need for emergency reserve in folder format
  • ✓ Security personnel and bodyguards needing one-hand operable rescue tools

Frequently asked questions – emergency knives

What sets an emergency knife apart from a survival knife?

Three central differences: First, the use focus. Emergency knives are designed for urban rescue situations – EMS use, vehicle extrication, first aid. Survival knives are built for outdoor wilderness emergencies – batoning, bug-out bag, multi-day survival. Second, the blade size and shape. Emergency knives have compact blades (6–12 cm), often with hook shape or serration. Survival knives have larger blades (11–14 cm) with drop point or tanto shape. Third, the format. Emergency knives are often folders or compact special tools; survival knives mostly fixed blades with Full Tang. If you work in the car, in the first aid kit or in EMS, emergency knife is your choice. For wilderness outdoor the survival knife.

Are emergency knives freely available in Switzerland?

Yes. Emergency knives – both fixed-blade and one-hand folder – are freely available and may be carried without special restrictions under Article 4 of the Swiss Weapons Act. You don’t need a justified reason. Integrated glass breaker, seatbelt cutter or hook blade also do not legally make the knife a special weapon. Prohibited, however, are butterfly/balisong knives, gravity knives, switchblades with blades over 5 cm and throwing knives – but those are all special types and not emergency knives. Source: fedpol.admin.ch.

How does a hook blade work?

The hook blade is the key feature on the Gerber Crisis Hook Knife: a curved, protected edge where the actual cutting blade sits inside the hook. You slide clothing, bandages, belts or pieces of composite clothing into the hook, and pulling drives the internal blade through the material cleanly – without the tip being able to injure the skin of the person being rescued. This is exactly the decisive advantage over a normal blade: maximum safety when cutting directly on the body. Hook blades are standard with EMS personnel and in professional rescue services.

What is a strap cutter and when do I need one?

A strap cutter is a dedicated rescue tool without a classic cutting blade: instead, a protected hook mechanism designed exclusively for cutting seatbelts, straps and ropes. The Gerber Strap Cutter Rescue Tool is the specialist for this in our range. When do you need one? In first aid kits in the car, in the office, on public transport, or for firefighters and EMS personnel who must cut seatbelts and ropes without injury risk. Compared to the Crisis Hook’s hook blade, the strap cutter is less versatile (no clothing cutting), but more compact and lighter, and fits in any first aid pouch.

What is the glass breaker on an emergency knife for?

The glass breaker (also called striking pommel) is a hardened steel pin at the end of the handle. It is designed to shatter tempered safety glass like car side windows or emergency windows with a targeted strike – crucial, for example, in an accident, a car that has fallen into water or a trapped person in a vehicle. In our emergency knife range, the Ruike M195 and Ruike LD43 have an integrated glass breaker. Important: tempered safety glass (side window) shatters after impact into blunt cubes and is not to be confused with laminated glass (windshield), which cannot be broken by a glass breaker.

Which emergency knife belongs in the car?

For the car, we primarily recommend the Ruike M195 rescue knife or the folding variant Ruike LD43. Both combine a glass breaker with seatbelt cutter and compact build – ideal for the glove compartment or centre console. In an emergency (accident, car in water, trapped occupant), this combination can be life-decisive. For preppers who additionally have a rescue kit in the trunk, the Gerber Strap Cutter Rescue Tool is a useful complement – specifically for cutting multiple belts. Important: emergency knives in the car must be quickly accessible – do not stow in the trunk or in locked compartments.

Which blade steel is suitable for an emergency knife?

For emergency knives, stainless steels are mandatory because the tool often sits unused in the first aid kit or car for months. Recommendation: 14C28N (Sandvik, Ruike standard) as a low-maintenance, easy-to-sharpen all-rounder – first choice for most applications. Beta+ (Ruike proprietary recipe in LD and P series) offers improved toughness for EDC with emergency reserve. 12C27 (Sandvik) as an affordable stainless mid-range choice. D2 tool steel (Ruike F186) is very edge-retentive but slightly rust-prone – only suitable for emergency setup with regular care. Carbon steel is not recommended in the emergency knife segment.

Folder or fixed blade for emergencies?

It depends on the field of use. Folders (Ruike LD series, P series, LD43) are more compact, can be carried on the belt clip or stowed in pocket/first aid kit, and are ideal for EDC with emergency reserve. Disadvantage: opening costs one second more. Fixed blades (Gerber Crisis Hook, Strap Cutter, Ruike M195, F186) are immediately ready, more robust and better suited for professional use in EMS or fire department duty belt. Rule of thumb: for EDC and car emergency, a folder is enough; for professional use on the duty belt, rather fixed blade.

Which emergency knife is suitable for EMS personnel?

For EMS personnel and rescue services, the Gerber Crisis Hook Knife is the specialised first choice: the protected hook blade allows safe cutting of clothing, bandages and belts directly on the patient’s body, without injury risk. As a complement, the Gerber Strap Cutter Rescue Tool is useful for the quick cutting of seatbelts without blade risk. For EMS personnel with extended emergency tasks (vehicle extrication), the Ruike M195 or LD43 with glass breaker and seatbelt cutter is additionally useful. Important: blade safety has absolute priority in EMS use – a pointed blade on an already injured patient is risky.

How do I look after an emergency knife in the first aid kit?

Emergency knives often sit unused in the first aid kit, glove compartment or duty belt for months. Six points: First, choose stainless steel (14C28N, Beta+, 12C27). Second, before storage, rub the blade with a drop of Ballistol or corrosion protection oil. Third, do not store in a damp pouch or damp leather sheath. Fourth, inspect every three to six months while you also update other first aid kit contents (bandage, scissors, plasters). Fifth, check blade sharpness – a dull emergency knife is almost useless in use. Sixth, check the mechanism: open and close folders to test the smoothness of springs and detents.

Which emergency knife is suitable for beginners?

For getting started, we recommend three models per field of use: for the car, the Ruike LD43 rescue knife – folder with glass breaker, seatbelt cutter and serration in a compact format. For the first aid kit or travel bag, the Gerber Strap Cutter Rescue Tool – small, safe and without injury risk. For EDC with emergency reserve, a Ruike folder from the LD series (LD11 as a compact entry model, LD31 as a medium-sized all-rounder). Professional upgrade to the Gerber Crisis Hook Knife for EMS personnel or to the Ruike M195 as an all-purpose rescue tool with fixed blade.

Does Swiss-Sale.ch ship from a Swiss warehouse?

Yes. All emergency knives are available from our warehouse in Menzingen (ZG) – no waiting time, no customs fees. Free shipping within Switzerland and Liechtenstein from CHF 100. Personal advice in our showroom or by phone at 041 755 34 33. In case of dissatisfaction, our 30-day voluntary right of return applies.

Discover emergency knives now

Original goods stocked in Switzerland · Free shipping from CHF 100 · Personal advice at 041 755 34 33

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