In its favor
- 33 implements including two blades, scissors, magnifier, and pliers in 91 mm
- Red cellidor scales survived ten months of pocket abuse with no splits or chips
- Both blades held a working edge across ten months with one stropping at month five
- Victorinox lifetime warranty replaced a friend's broken corkscrew in twelve days
Watch-outs
- Springs require a real fingernail to open and are stiff for the first month
- No locking blades, which is the Swiss design tradition but limits hard cutting
- Thicker in pocket than slim Victorinox Cadet or Compact models
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedThirty-three tools that actually get usedThe red scales and build held upBlades and the no-lock traditionBreak-in and the warranty backstopWho should buy the Victorinox Swiss Army Champion Plus?The verdict Compared The specs FAQsQuick verdict
The Victorinox Swiss Army Champion Plus is the classic do-everything pocket tool, packing 33 implements including two blades, scissors, pliers, and an 8x magnifier into a 91 mm frame. After ten months of pocket carry the red scales survived without splits and both blades held a working edge with one stropping. The springs are stiff at first and nothing locks, but as an everyday pocket toolkit it is a genuine standard-bearer.
Why you should trust this review
I bought this knife and carried it daily for ten months. Victorinox had no involvement and provided nothing.
I have carried Swiss Army knives for years, including slimmer Cadet and Compact models, so I can tell you exactly what you gain and what you give up by going to the fully loaded Champion Plus.
How we evaluated
I carried the Champion Plus in a front pocket for ten months and used whichever tool the moment called for, from cutting tape and opening boxes to trimming threads, tightening screws, and reading fine print with the magnifier.
I tracked how the cellidor scales held up against keys and coins, watched the edge on both blades over the months, and noted how the springs and individual implements behaved as they broke in.
Thirty-three tools that actually get used
The Champion Plus is the maximalist take on the Swiss Army format, and the implement list is the point: two blades, spring-loaded scissors, pliers, a corkscrew, files, and a built-in 8x magnifier, all in a 91 mm body.
What surprised me over ten months was how many of these I used regularly. The scissors and small blade earned their keep daily, the pliers handled small fixes a knife alone cannot, and the magnifier genuinely helped with splinters and fine print. It is a toolkit you forget you are carrying until you need it.
The red scales and build held up
The red cellidor scales survived ten months of pocket abuse alongside keys and coins with no splits or chips. For a material that takes constant friction, that is a strong result.
At 6.5 ounces and thicker than a slim Cadet, this is a tool you feel in the pocket. That heft is the cost of carrying 33 implements, and whether it is worth it depends on how much of that toolkit you will actually use.
Blades and the no-lock tradition
Both blades held a working edge across the full ten months, needing just a single stropping around month five. The X55CrMo14 stainless is easy to maintain and takes a keen edge quickly.
Neither blade locks, which is the Swiss design tradition. For everyday cutting it is fine, but it limits the knife for hard or forceful tasks where a locking blade would feel safer. Go in knowing this is a refined pocket tool, not a hard-use fixed blade.
Break-in and the warranty backstop
The springs need a real fingernail to open and feel stiff for the first month before they loosen into a smooth, satisfying action. New owners sometimes mistake that initial stiffness for a defect; it is just break-in.
Behind it all sits the Victorinox lifetime warranty, which replaced a friend’s broken corkscrew in twelve days. That kind of support is a real part of the value and a reason these tools get handed down rather than thrown away.
Who should buy the Victorinox Swiss Army Champion Plus?
Buy it if:
- You want one pocket tool that covers the widest range of everyday tasks.
- You will actually use the scissors, pliers, files, and magnifier.
- You value a durable classic backed by a lifetime warranty.
- You do not mind a thicker, heavier knife in exchange for capability.
Skip it if:
- You want a slim, light everyday carry like a Cadet or Compact.
- You need a locking blade for hard or forceful cutting.
- You will only ever use one or two of the implements.
- You dislike a stiff break-in period before the springs loosen.
The verdict
The Champion Plus is the Swiss Army knife for people who want the whole toolkit in their pocket, and after ten months it earned its classic standing. The implements get used, the scales survived, the blades held, and the warranty stands behind it all.
It is thick, heavy, and the springs make you work for the first month, and none of the blades lock. But if you want a single tool that handles a remarkable range of everyday jobs and lasts for decades, this is the standard the whole category is measured against.
Compared
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Victorinox Champion Plus | Best Classic Pocket Tool | 4.7 | Check price |
| Leatherman Wave+ Multi-Tool | Best Working Tool | 4.7 | Check price |
| Victorinox SwissTool Spirit X | Best Heavy Pliers | 4.6 | Check price |
| Generic 30-in-1 Pocket Knife | Skip | 2.7 | Check price |
The specs
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Victorinox Swiss Army Champion Plus FAQs
Yes for daily carry users who want a refined classic pocket tool with the broadest implement variety in the Swiss Army line. The lifetime warranty, the Swiss-made build quality, and the genuine tool refinement justify the premium over generic knockoffs. For working pliers, the Leatherman Wave+ at this price is the alternative.
The Champion Plus is the better refined daily carry tool with more variety, scissors, and a magnifier in a slimmer handle. The Leatherman is the better working multi-tool with real pliers, locking blades, and replaceable wire cutters. Pick the Champion Plus for office and travel carry. Pick the Wave+ for trade and field work.
Yes. The X55CrMo14 stainless takes a fine working edge and holds it through normal cutting. After ten months I stropped the main blade once at month five and it still slices paper cleanly today.
No. The Champion Plus follows the Swiss slip-joint tradition with no blade lock. The springs are stiff enough that I have never had a blade close on a finger, but for hard prying or carving, a locking knife is the safer choice.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


