FLISSA 4-Piece Fish Fillet Set, Cleaning Kit - 7" Fillet Review
Our verdict
The FLISSA 4-Piece Fish Fillet Cleaning Kit is a fair pick at $17.99, pairing a 7 inch ceramic blade with three companion pieces, and it holds a 4.6 star rating, though its 91 reviews are the smallest sample in this comparison.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Anglers who want a complete 4 piece cleaning kit rather than a single blade, built around a 7 inch ceramic knife, and who are comfortable buying from a newer listing with a smaller review base.
Skip if
Skip it if you want a proven track record backed by thousands of reviews, since this listing has only 91 compared to the Kershaw 1259X's 1,500, or if ceramic blades are not your preference over steel.
- Material Ceramic
- Length 7 Inches
- Size 7 inches
- Color Black
- Pieces 4.0 Count
- Priced 44% below the category median ($32.23 across 74 tracked models)
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.6/5
4.6 average across 91 owner ratings
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Popularity0.7/5
91 owner reviews, fewer than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other fishing gear and tackle we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Overview
Some anglers would rather buy a complete cleaning setup in one purchase than piece together a knife, a sharpener, and shears separately. The FLISSA 4-Piece Fish Fillet Set aims at that buyer, bundling a 7 inch blade with three additional pieces for $17.99, a price that sits just above the $10.49 Rapala 126SP but under the $20.51 Kershaw 1259X.
The blade is built from ceramic rather than the stainless steel or co-polymer combinations seen on the Rapala and Kershaw knives, finished in black at a 7 inch length. Ceramic blades are known for holding an edge without frequent sharpening, though the listing does not include a weight figure the way Rapala does for its 126SP and BP136SH.
At 4.6 stars, the rating matches the Kershaw 1259X and beats the Rapala BP136SH's 4.4, but that score comes from only 91 reviews, a much smaller sample than the Kershaw 1259X's 1,500 or the Rapala 126SP's 423. Bought last month sits at 100+, on par with the Rapala 126SP and ahead of the Rapala BP136SH's 0+, suggesting steady but not exceptional recent demand for this set.
Pros
- 4.6 star rating matches the Kershaw 1259X and beats the Rapala BP136SH's 4.4
- 4 piece set gives more than a single blade for $17.99
- Ceramic blade material is a different build than the steel options in this comparison
- 100+ bought last month matches the Rapala 126SP's demand figure
- Priced under the $20.51 Kershaw 1259X while including three extra pieces
Cons
- Only 91 reviews, the smallest sample size of any fillet knife compared here
- No listed weight spec, unlike the Rapala 126SP (2.4 ounces) or Kershaw 1259X (3.5 ounces)
- Ceramic blades can be more brittle than steel if dropped or twisted
- At $17.99, it costs more than the Rapala 126SP's $10.49 for what is still an unproven listing by review count
Specifications
| Material | Ceramic |
|---|---|
| Length | 7 Inches |
| Size | 7 inches |
| Color | Black |
| Pieces | 4.0 Count |
Performance notes
A 7 inch ceramic blade sits between the 6 inch Rapala 126SP and the 9 inch Kershaw 1259X, a reasonable middle ground for mid-size fish. Ceramic construction is typically prized for holding a sharp edge longer than steel between sharpenings, though it can chip or crack under lateral pressure or if used to pry rather than slice, a tradeoff worth knowing given the Rapala and Kershaw knives here are built from steel and co-polymer rather than ceramic.
As a 4 piece set, this kit includes more than a stand-alone blade, likely covering additional cleaning tasks beyond filleting itself. That bundled approach is different from the single-blade Rapala 126SP, Rapala BP136SH, and Kershaw 1259X, so buyers should weigh whether they want a full kit or a standalone knife, along with ceramic's edge retention against its brittleness compared to the steel options in this comparison.
What buyers say
A 4.6 star average ties the Kershaw 1259X's rating and edges out the Rapala BP136SH's 4.4, but it rests on only 91 reviews, a fraction of the Kershaw 1259X's 1,500 or even the Rapala BP136SH's 264. That smaller sample means the rating, while positive, has not been tested across as many buyers. Bought last month at 100+ matches the Rapala 126SP exactly and beats the Rapala BP136SH's 0+, which points to steady, if modest, ongoing demand. Together the pattern suggests a well-liked but still relatively new or lower-volume listing rather than an established best seller.
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Frequently asked questions
What is included in the FLISSA 4-Piece Fish Fillet Set?
The listing includes 4 pieces built around a 7 inch ceramic blade in black, positioned as a cleaning kit rather than a single stand-alone knife, priced at $17.99. That is a bit more than the $10.49 Rapala 126SP but still under the $20.51 Kershaw 1259X for the extra pieces included.
Is a ceramic blade a good choice for filleting fish?
Ceramic can hold an edge longer between sharpenings than the steel used in the Rapala 126SP or the co-polymer-handled Kershaw 1259X, but it is more prone to chipping under lateral stress, so careful handling matters more than with a steel blade.
How reliable is the 4.6 star rating?
It is a solid score, matching the Kershaw 1259X, but it is built on only 91 reviews, far fewer than the Kershaw 1259X's 1,500 or the Rapala 126SP's 423, so treat it as an encouraging early signal rather than a proven long-term track record.