Everyday Carry

The 5 Best Pocket Multitools for EDC

Authored by:
Mikey Bautista
Reviewed by:
Bernard Capulong
Founder and Editor-in-Chief
14+ Years Reviewing EDC Products
The 5 Best Pocket Multitools for EDC
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Multitools are a great addition to any EDC for the sheer amount of utility they can bring to your kit. The problem is, sometimes the tool itself takes up even more space and weighs more than the entire carry combined. It's hard to put one to good use when the added bulk is a hindrance rather than a benefit for everyday tasks. In this guide, we list five of our favorite pocket-friendly multitools, excellent not only for their repertoire of functions but also for their form factor, bringing you all the benefits without the added bloat.

Top 5 Pocket-Sized Multitools

Victorinox Alox Cadet 84mm (L)

Switzerland's silver stunner is one of the most popular EDC multitools of all time, and for good reason. It looks great and weighs next to nothing thanks to its namesake aluminum oxide scales. It packs a surgical-sharp 2.5” blade, and still somehow manages to stay thinner than a pencil even with three extra tools. Whether as a main blade or as a backup, you would be hard-pressed to find better compact value than the Alox Cadet.

BUY ($29)


Victorinox Manager & Midnite Manager 58mm (L)

Of all of Victorinox's keychain offerings, the Manager series is our favorite because they're a complete set of EDC tools packed into a highly compact 58 mm form factor. The Midnite Manager ($36) includes a knife, pen, and flashlight with an accompaniment of other tools, while the Manager swaps out the LED for tweezers. It's hard to imagine anything better (or smaller) than these guys.

BUY ($26)

Leatherman Style PS 75mm (L)

While people’s eyes are usually on Leatherman's more popular Skeletool CX, we haven't forgotten that its smaller siblings serve an excellent purpose: being ideal multitools for keychain or belt loop carry and playing well with local laws. The Style PS shown above is also meant to be TSA compliant with its scissors instead of a blade, with some owners successfully able to get it through airport checkpoints. Still as tough as its brothers and still highly useful, it’s one tool that you can safely take with you on your travels.

BUY ($24)

Gerber Dime 70mm (L)

An oldie but a goodie, the Gerber Dime is still a highly versatile keychain tool. The Dime manages to fit ten large functions—including a unique package-opening blade and a pair of pliers—into a package able to collapse into a tiny 2.75”. It's also a very inexpensive investment, often priced well below the $20 mark, costing you next to nothing to add one to your carry.

BUY ($16)

Gerber Shard 70mm (L)

Speaking of oldies but goodies, we can't make a list about multitools without mentioning the single most popular multitool on the site. A one-piece multitool designed with only the essentials in mind, the Gerber Shard is highly effective in its simplicity and focus. With 7 functions under .5 ounces and an asking price of $7 (but usually well under), it's one of the best things you can add to your keychain without sacrificing space, weight, or cost.

BUY ($3)

We hope you enjoyed our list of multitools that put power in your pocket and not strain on your belt. Did we miss one of your favorites? Sound off in the comments below!

Mikey Bautista

Director of Everyday Carry Operations


About the Author
Mikey Bautista is an everyday carry (EDC) expert who has been working with the EverydayCarry.com team for nearly a decade, starting with an interest in EDC as a hobby and ending up as a writer for the site in 2014. Through the years, he’s led the site in editorial content and writing about products across every category, from knives to bags to flashlights and everything in between, as well as discovering, bringing exposure, and building bridges with many brands in the industry. Today, he is the site's Director of Everyday Carry Operations, leading the editorial team and managing day-to-day operations.

He has lived through many personal and professional lives, spending nearly a decade in the workforce management industry, a minor career in gaming, and has lent a hand with entrepreneurial efforts back home in the Philippines. He has also been an active participant and helped build a number of significant social communities online, both for EDC and his other hobbies.

Mikey has been at the cusp of gaming, technology, and the internet since the ‘90s and continues to lend his experience, expertise, and authority to all his pursuits. When not online, in a game, or watching movies, you'll find him in the gym, speedrunning his next hobby, or talking at length about EDC with anyone willing to listen.

Bernard Capulong

Founder and Editor-in-Chief


About the Reviewer
Bernard Capulong is an everyday carry (EDC) gear expert, entrepreneur, all-around nerd, and the founder and editor-in-chief of EverydayCarry.com—the largest online community for EDC gear enthusiasts. Since founding Everyday Carry in 2009, he’s built over a decade of experience in the industry, reviewing and highlighting brands and products, including pocket knives, flashlights, wallets, watches, bags, pens, and much more.

Bernard is known for bringing everyday carry out of obscurity and into the mainstream, having been published or featured in various publications such as GQ, TIME Magazine, The New York Times, VICE, HYPEBEAST, Outside, and many others. He has also played a part in curating, designing, and developing digital and physical products, resulting in successful crowdfunding projects or limited edition collaboration products with established softgoods brands. He stays on the pulse of the EDC industry by attending trade shows, participating in online interest communities, and actively engaging with fellow gear enthusiasts on social media.

In addition to being the editor-in-chief and main social media personality for EverydayCarry.com, Bernard is an avid gearhead and collector in general. His personal collections span technical bags, fountain pens, digital cameras, retro gaming hardware, personal hi-fi audio gear, and mechanical wristwatches, to name a few. Bernard Capulong is a prominent figure and trusted authority in the everyday carry industry with a career dedicated to helping people discover this hobby and stay prepared with quality gear.

Discussion (32 total)

Sergio A. Molina ·
Whatttt, you guys are killingggg me. No mention of a Leatherman Squirt PS4 or Juice S2??
Bernard Capulong ·
please don't die. how do we make it stop?!?!
Sergio A. Molina ·
Nah, i'll live ;D Love you guys too much to die!
Bernard Capulong ·
Anyway the Juice S2 is solid no doubt, but still in the next weight class up. I personally carried the Juice S2 (RIP the storm grey color) for my pocket multitool. In our next multitool guide we'll list some of the best "toolbox replacement" options—tools that pack the most pound for pound functionality—and the Juice has a better chance in that mid-full size range. These are really lightweight pocket/keychain considerations.
Joseph Townsend ·
My thought exactly! Love my blue ps4.
Lauren Phillips ·
My gerber dime has quickly become the tool I never knew I needed. Be it opening an amazon parcel or cutting a string on my guitar for a hasty string change before gigs, its definitely something I can't leave the house without.
Andrew Curtis ·
Same here. I laughed at the package opener when I first saw it. Now I use it all the time. Perfect MT for office and other light work.
Jim McNeely ·
I had a Gerber Dime and the scissors won't cut paper, and the screwdriver seemed to weak to tighten a screw. So, why carry it? I love my Leatherman Squirt - very high quality and even smaller.
Johan Bertilsson ·
I have a Leatherman Style PS on my keychain, can't manager without it. I don't have any alox Vics, but several others including an Minichamp, with pen. And you forgot the Leatherman Brewzer.
Jared Apperson ·
I fly weekly, and have been carrying the Leatherman Style PS for well over a year now. The first couple of times I went through screening, I left it in my bag, and it got pulled and scrutinized every time. Now, I keep it in my front pocket, and when I get to screening, I open it up, toss it into one of the small, round security bins alongside my iPhone, and it gets through easy-peasy. The X-ray screener usually pulls it out, looks at if for a few seconds, then tosses it right back in. I often times will get a 'thank you' from them for having it out and open.
Scott R Hill ·
Hot damn, I own 4 of the 5. Instead of the Gerber Shard I care the Boker Plus Vox Access Tool. I know it's A LOT more expensive, but it does what I need it to do.
Corbs ·
I have a SOG Pocket PowerPlier and an Alox Minichamp every day, the Minichamp is awesome, and the SOG is easy to swap tools to become bladeless. With the 1/4 socket drive and a bit kit, it's a small tool that will face up to big jobs.
Cody Rolow ·
Why get the shard when you can get the artifact?
Bernard Capulong ·
The cool thing about 2 of the tools featured here are that they're TSA friendly. The Artifact is cool if you need the utility blade, but for a little add-on tool that might be redundant (like you carry a dedicated knife or something), or a no-go for certain situations (airports, govt buildings, venues, etc). For some, not having a blade complicate things is a plus!
Cody Rolow ·
Agreed but the cool thing about the artifact (for me as a designer anyway) is that you always have your exacto blade! Which is pretty big in my daily grind. Completely understand how it would be redundant to most though.
Cody Rolow ·
Side thought.... The blade just slips in. Maybe I should figure out a non blade "attachment"?! Could probably make a light duty 1/4" wrench fit...
Nathaniel P ·
Love my Style PS. My go-to tool when I can't legally carry a knife. (School, courthouses, etc.)
Miguel Angel Hurtado ·
Vic Midnight Manager FTW. If I could only carry one thing, this would be it, because it elegantly replaces 6-7 things. Best keychain pocket tool they make.
Ethan ·
I have the leatherman style ps it is a handy tool. I am glad it has pliers, most keychain multitool just have scissors. Sometimes I change my multitool to the Victorinox classic sd.
Astropin ·
I've carried multiple Victorinox/Wenger pocket tools as well as the dime and the Squirt PS4. By far the PS4 is the best of them all. Bought another just to have as a backup.
Not that big of a deal, but I thought the Manager comes with the tweezers instead of the toothpick.
You list the Gerber Shard as "under seven ounces". It is actually way under. Twenty of them together weigh less than that. The correct weight is 0.3 ounces.
kyle miller ·
have the Dime and have given them to my sons as well... they're great in a camera bag, and there's a 'TSA' safe version, though that's not what i have... i like them better than the leatherman squirt, which i tried and no longer ever carry. My Dime is in my camera bag... there's a Shard on my daily keychain, and a Schnelle B102 on my keychain for the wife's car. But it's good to learn about new things... may have to try a Leatherman Style, now.
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