Danish online shop Nyttigbras, based in Grasten in southern Jutland, sells knives and cutting tools and describes itself as the largest stock-holding webshop in Denmark for Swiss knives, kitchen knives, and Japanese kitchen knives. It is a confident claim, and the catalogue behind it is broad enough to give it some credibility. The site runs in Danish and serves Danish buyers, drawing in cooks, collectors, outdoor types, and hunters at the same time.
The Victorinox presence is the spine of the range. You will find Swiss Army pocket knives, the Alox line with its ribbed aluminium scales, and limited-edition models aimed at people who collect these things and track which year a pattern was issued. Alongside the folding knives sit Victorinox kitchen knives, then a step up into Japanese steel through the Kasumi brand, which is where the serious cooking crowd tends to spend its money. Pairing a mainstream, do-everything maker like Victorinox with a more specialist Japanese name covers both the casual buyer and the person who already knows the difference between a santoku and a gyuto.
Scissors get proper footing here too, though they arrive with their own logic rather than being tacked on. The Japanese KAI brand anchors that section, with kitchen shears and craft scissors filling it out. Stocking a recognised cutting-tool maker for scissors instead of generic house-brand pairs says something about how the buyer behind Nyttigbras thinks about the shelf. The specialty knives carry that further: bushcraft and hunting blades come via Linder, there are children's knives for households easing a kid into using a real tool, and flower knives for people who garden or arrange blooms. That last category is the sort of thing a general retailer skips entirely.
Accessories round it out in a practical way. Key rings, tool storage, and maintenance products are all listed, and the maintenance side matters for this kind of shop. Anyone spending real money on Japanese kitchen steel or a collectible Victorinox needs sharpening and care gear to keep it in shape, so having it available on the same site closes a loop that buyers would otherwise chase elsewhere. The promotional bundles, such as three items for 250 DKK, lean toward the impulse end of the catalogue and look like a way to move smaller accessories and lower-cost knives without slashing prices outright.
On the buying experience, Nyttigbras states fast delivery and a 14-day full return right, which is the standard consumer protection in this market but worth seeing spelled out plainly. There is an FAQ section and a returns portal, and the returns portal shows that the shop expects returns to happen and has built a proper route for them rather than forcing customers into an email back-and-forth. For a category where fit, weight, and feel in the hand matter, and where people sometimes order a knife and decide it is not the one, that infrastructure counts for something. The practical implication is that a first order carries less risk than it might with a shop that handles returns informally.
The company side is documented openly. Nyttigbras trades under CVR 35770690 and lists a physical address at Solbakken 13 in Grasten, near the German border. A registered CVR number plus a real street location is the baseline a Danish shopper should expect, and it is present. Contact routes are easy to find: the address, an email, and a contact page are all reachable without hunting, so a buyer who wants to ask a question before ordering can do so without friction. None of this is flashy, but it is the groundwork that separates a small specialist shop from a dropship front with a rented logo.
Reputation outside the site
On Trustpilot, Nyttigbras carries 10 reviews and a 3.2 out of 5 score, which the platform labels as average. Ten reviews is a small sample, and one or two unhappy customers can drag a score like that down hard, so the number tells you less than it would for a shop with hundreds of ratings. Still, the score sits in the middle of the scale and not near the top, and that is worth noting before a first order. There is a Facebook page with a reviews tab, though the count there was not confirmed, and no other notable review platform turned up.
So the outside evidence on Nyttigbras is limited, landing at roughly fair: neither a glowing endorsement nor a warning, just an incomplete picture. A buyer placing a larger order is taking that gap on faith, which is the honest thing to say about it. The self-description as Denmark's largest stock-holding knife webshop goes further than what 10 Trustpilot ratings can back up, though the inventory depth itself is real enough that the claim does not feel purely invented.
The overall picture
What carries Nyttigbras is the catalogue and how deliberately it has been assembled. A general retailer might fill a page with whatever knives the distributor lists; the choices here, Victorinox and Kasumi for kitchens, KAI for scissors, Linder for the field, plus the oddments like flower knives and children's knives, point to someone selecting brands by their standing in a specific niche. That consistency across the range is the most reassuring thing about the shop, more so than the self-described superlatives in the header copy.
The bundles and fast-delivery messaging show Nyttigbras also wants to be easy to buy from, not purely a static brand list. The shop has documentation, a functional return path, and a focused inventory that covers the main product categories coherently. Where it falls short is the public customer record: a 3.2 across 10 Trustpilot ratings is too narrow a base to draw firm conclusions from. For a specific Victorinox model, a Japanese kitchen knife, or a piece of bushcraft kit, Nyttigbras is worth checking. The depth in Swiss and Japanese knives is the strongest reason to visit; the limited and middling Trustpilot rating is the reason to read those few existing reviews before spending significantly.
Business address
Nyttigbras
Solbakken 13,
Graasten,
Jylland
6300
Denmark
Contact details
Phone: +4529176695