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CES 2026: This knife secretly vibrates when you cut with it

I spent part of my Sunday night at CES 2026 chopping vegetables at the Open press event booth. But this wasn’t your average cooking demo: My knife vibrated whenever I cut a tomato.

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What to expect at CES 2026

This may sound like a twist Cutthroat Kitchen challenging, but trust me – it’s more effective than it sounds. Debuting this month from Seattle-based cutting startup Ultrasonics, the C-200 UltraSonic Chef’s Knife has an orange button on its handle that makes its 8-inch blade vibrate about 30,000 times per second. This allows it to slice food more smoothly than a regular knife, and prevents crumbs from sticking to the gum. It should not need to be sharpened very often.

Cutting and dialing.
Credit: Haley Henschel / Mashable

Impressively, the C-200 only moves a distance of 10 to 20 microns when it vibrates — a quarter of the width of a grain of salt, according to a PR representative — so you can’t see or hear it moving at all. It looks and handles like a standard chef’s knife, albeit one on the longer side. The only reason I’m sure the Seattle Ultrasonics wouldn’t wear me with a normal knife is because it occasionally made a shrill sound when used wet. It’s the same high-pitched sound a wine glass makes when you run a wet finger along its rim.

I can’t say that the C-200 worked much better than the nice new chef’s knife I just got for Christmas, but it cut like a dream. I had no problem getting it to cut paper-thin slices of tomato with a light touch. A Seattle Ultrasonics rep likened riding a bike to riding an e-bike because it makes the experience less intense.

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Seattle Ultrasonics C-200 UltraSonic Chef's Knife on a cutting board next to potatoes and tomatoes

Vibration aside, it’s just a decent looking knife.
Credit: Haley Henschel / Mashable

The IC-200 has been six years in the making, and the company says it’s the first ultrasonic knife on the market designed for home use. Commercial options are expensive and large; something much smaller is the size of a shoebox. In order to store the small C-200, its circuit board had to be folded in on itself inside the handle.

a man cutting tomatoes with a Seattle Ultrasonics C-200 UltraSonic Chef knife

The IC-200 can be paired with a mahogany wireless charging pad (not pictured).
Credit: Haley Henschel / Mashable

The IC-200 is IP65 rated for water resistance, meaning you can hand wash it like any other chef’s knife. Its removable battery is rechargeable via USB-C.

The first production run of the C-200 sold out begins shipping later this month, and its second batch of pre-orders is now live on the Seattle Ultrasonics website ahead of a March release. It costs $399 on its own and $499 for its mahogany wireless charging pad, so it’s decidedly a splurge for serious home cooks. In its defense, some Japanese chef’s knives are quite expensive as well don’t do it vibrate.

Credit: Seattle Ultrasonics

$399
at Seattle Ultrasonics

Credit: Seattle Ultrasonics

$499
at Seattle Ultrasonics

Go to the Mashable CES 2026 hub for the latest news and live updates from the biggest tech game, where Mashable reporters report live.

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