EVERY TYPE
OF RAZOR
EXPLAINED
Safety razor, cartridge, disposable, electric — each has a completely different design philosophy, cost structure, and result on different faces. Here is the honest, science-based comparison UK men actually need.
The question “which type of razor is best?” gets asked constantly and answered inadequately almost every time — usually with a conclusion that reflects the writer’s personal preference rather than a systematic evaluation of who each type is actually best suited for. This guide does it properly: each razor type assessed across the same criteria, with honest acknowledgement of what each does well and what it does badly, and a specific decision guide at the end that tells you which type fits your specific situation.
THE FOUR RAZOR TYPES — DETAILED
How It Works
Multiple blades (2–7) mounted in a plastic cartridge with a fixed blade geometry and a built-in pivot mechanism. The cartridge attaches to a reusable handle and is replaced as a unit when blades dull. The pivot maintains correct blade angle automatically as the head follows facial contours.
Genuine Advantages
- Automatic pivot — no angle management by user
- Multi-blade efficiency — fewer passes required
- Lubrication strip delivers product at blade level
- Lowest technique barrier of any wet razor
- Subscription delivery solves the replacement problem
Genuine Limitations
- Higher cost than safety razor blades
- More plastic waste per unit than safety razor
- Multi-blade can be over-engineered for fine beards
- Premium brand (Gillette) pricing is unreasonable
Best For
- Most UK men — especially beginners
- Complex facial contours (angular jaw, Adam’s apple)
- Men who value convenience over ritual
- Sensitive skin (multi-blade reduces passes needed)
- SmartShave: £9.99 starter, £14.99–£19.99/month
How It Works
A single double-edge (DE) blade clamped between two metal plates at a fixed angle. The user must manually maintain the correct 30–45° blade angle throughout every stroke — the head does not pivot. The blade is replaced as a single thin steel wafer, typically costing 5–30p.
Genuine Advantages
- Lowest ongoing cost — blades from 5–30p each
- Less plastic waste per shave
- Meditative, deliberate shaving experience
- Very close result when technique is mastered
- One-time handle investment (£20–£80)
Genuine Limitations
- Steep technique learning curve — weeks to master angle
- No pivot — fails on complex contours without skill
- Higher nick risk during learning period
- Slower shave — requires more care per stroke
- Not ideal for sensitive skin beginners
Best For
- Men who enjoy the ritual and craft of shaving
- Experienced shavers seeking lower ongoing cost
- Regular facial geometry (no severe angular jaw)
- Men with time for a considered morning routine
- SmartShave DE-1: £79 one-off kit
How It Works
An all-plastic unit containing one to five blades, designed for single-use or very limited multiple use before disposal. The handle and blade cartridge are a single non-separable unit. No handle investment required. Widely available in supermarkets, pharmacies, and corner shops.
Genuine Advantages
- Available anywhere, immediately
- No handle required — truly grab-and-go
- Appropriate for genuine emergencies
- Cheapest immediate-access option per unit
Genuine Limitations
- Significantly inferior blade quality
- No lubricating strip quality equivalent to cartridges
- Dramatically more plastic waste per shave
- Handle quality creates inconsistent pressure control
- Most expensive per shave when used regularly
Best For
- Travel emergencies (forgot your razor)
- Genuinely one-off situations
- Not recommended as a regular shaving method
- If you find yourself using disposables regularly, switch to a SmartShave subscription immediately
How It Works
An electric motor drives either oscillating foil blades (foil shaver) or rotating circular blades (rotary shaver) across the skin surface. Hair is drawn into apertures in the foil or rotary head and cut by the blade below. No water, cream or gel is strictly required — though wet electric shavers can use both.
Genuine Advantages
- Dry shaving capability — no prep required
- Fastest shave for men with light-medium beards
- Lower irritation on highly sensitive skin
- No blade replacement schedule (heads last 12–18 months)
- Good for maintaining stubble at consistent length
Genuine Limitations
- Rarely achieves the closeness of a wet shave
- High upfront cost (£80–£350 for quality units)
- Head replacement cost significant (£30–£80 every 12–18 months)
- Poor performance on dense or coarse beards
- Battery/charging dependency
Best For
- Men who cannot or prefer not to wet shave
- Light beard that does not require maximum closeness
- Stubble maintenance at a consistent length
- Very sensitive skin that reacts to all wet shaving
- Combined approach: electric for weekdays, wet for weekends
HEAD-TO-HEAD — THE HONEST SCORECARD
| Criterion | Cartridge | Safety Razor | Disposable | Electric |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Closeness of shave | Excellent | Excellent (when skilled) | Below average | Good — rarely excellent |
| Technique required | Low — pivot handles it | High — weeks to learn | Very low | Low — no prep |
| Ongoing cost per shave | Low with SmartShave | Lowest (5–30p/blade) | Highest per quality result | Low once hardware paid off |
| Upfront cost | £9.99 starter kit | £20–£80 handle | Under £5 | £80–£350 |
| Sensitive skin suitability | Very good (lubrication strip) | Good when skilled | Poor | Good (no product needed) |
| Complex facial contours | Excellent (pivot head) | Requires significant skill | Poor | Rotary handles curves |
| Eco-friendliness | Moderate (plastic cartridges) | Best — metal blade only | Worst — full unit disposal | Moderate — long head lifespan |
| Travel convenience | Excellent (cartridges flat) | Good but blade handling care | Best — nothing to manage | Charging dependency |
| Consistency for beginners | Best — automatic | Worst — all manual | Adequate | Good — forgiving |
WHICH RAZOR IS RIGHT FOR YOU — THE DECISION GUIDE
Match your profile to the right razor type
The cartridge razor wins on accessibility, consistency, and suitability for the widest range of UK men — particularly when the cartridge quality is right and the price is sensible (SmartShave, not Gillette at £4 per cartridge). The safety razor wins on running cost and eco-credentials when technique is established. The electric wins for specific use cases: light beards, no-prep scenarios, stubble maintenance. Disposables win only in genuine emergencies. For the vast majority of UK men reading this guide — the cartridge with a monthly SmartShave subscription is the correct answer: maximum convenience, sufficient quality, sensible economics, automatic delivery. The decision guide above exists for the men for whom a different answer is genuinely correct. Most of you should now be on the starter kit page.
