Best cut-resistant work gloves

Coated cut-resistant work gloves on a job task

Type guideUpdated July 2026

Cut-resistant gloves only help if the rating matches the blade or edge you face and the glove still lets you work. This guide from HPC Gloves focuses on ANSI/ISEA cut levels, common liner materials, and a short buying checklist. For the full rating table, use the ANSI cut levels and EN 388 reference.

Start with the cut risk, not the package claim

"Cut resistant" is not "cut proof." A light A2 glove that feels great for cartons will fail quickly against clean sheet metal edges. A stiff A7 glove can save skin on glass but will slow fine assembly if you wear it all day. Name the sharp object and how long your hands stay on it.

  • Light: cardboard, light packaging, general warehouse handling
  • Medium: stamped metal parts, appliance work, food processing knives
  • High: plate glass, razor knives in demo, heavy sheet metal fabrication

ANSI/ISEA cut levels in plain language

North American product labels usually show ANSI/ISEA 105 cut levels from A1 (lowest) to A9 (highest). The number is a lab result, not a guarantee for every blade angle or dullness. Use it as a minimum threshold for the task, then check grip and fit.

Typical level bandCommon use casesNotes
A1–A2Light abrasion, cartons, soft materialsOften enough for general material handling only
A3–A4Light metal, assembly, many warehouse knife tasksPopular balance of protection and dexterity
A5–A6Sheet metal, glass handling, higher knife exposureWatch for bulk and reduced feel
A7–A9Severe cut hazards, specialized fab and glass workPair with training; do not treat as armor
EN 388 note: European labels use a letter after the EN 388 pictogram for the TDM cut test (A–F). Do not mix that letter with ANSI A-levels without converting. Details live on the standards page.

Liner materials that show up in good gloves

  • HPPE and similar engineered yarns: common core for mid to high cut levels with decent comfort.
  • Steel or glass fiber blends: help push ratings higher; can feel stiffer and may irritate if the liner is damaged.
  • Aramid fibers: useful for cut plus some heat; not a substitute for a true welding glove.

Coatings and palm choices

The cut liner does the rating work. The coating decides whether you can hold oily steel or dry glass.

  • Polyurethane (PU): good dry grip and fine parts handling
  • Nitrile foam: strong oily metal grip for fab shops
  • Latex: wet grip in some settings; watch for latex allergy
  • Sandy or microfoam nitrile: mixed wet/dry industrial work

Buying checklist

  1. Confirm minimum ANSI cut level for the sharpest regular task on the shift.
  2. Pick coating for the surface: dry parts, oily metal, or wet packaging.
  3. Choose cuff length (knit wrist vs safety cuff) for snag risk and sleeve overlap.
  4. Size with the glove size chart. Loose gloves fold under a blade.
  5. Order a sample pair before a full case if the crew has never worn that model.
  6. Set a replace-on-damage rule. A cut liner with a slice is done.

What "best" means on this page

There is no single best cut-resistant glove for every trade. The best pair is the lowest cut level that still covers the hazard while preserving grip and feel. If your work is mostly framing, fasteners, and general site handling, also read the construction gloves guide. For chemical splash, switch to the chemical-resistant guide instead of stacking cut ratings alone.

HPC Gloves publishes independent buying guidance. Product categories and brand examples are educational. Always follow your site safety plan and the manufacturer's use limits.