The 6 Best Beer Bottle Openers, According to the Pros (2024)

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As the craft beer industry has changed over the years, so have bottle openers. When craft breweries adopted aluminum cans over the last decade, openers evolved to include a little nub to help pick up a pull tab or puncture the tear strip. Other models now include a serrated blade to help cut through wax that many brewers use to coat caps and necks of special-release beers. Some openers are designed to keep bottle caps intact, allowing them to be reused or utilized in art projects or installed on bar tops.

While fancy or functional openers are handy, just about anything else that can be leveraged between the glass lip and crown cap will work. This includes, but is not limited to, a BIC lighter, a table or counter corner, a beer can and a wedding ring.

“I find the best way to meet people [at parties or events] is just shout, ‘Who can open this?’ ” says Augie Carton, co-owner of Carton Brewing in Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey. “Then watch the hilarity or awesomeness ensue. And obviously share said beer with [that] person, which is why I’m drinking a bottle in the first place.”

We asked six beer professionals and enthusiasts which openers they swear by. Here are a few to consider for your next pour.

The Best Bottle Openers Recommended by Six Pros

1. The Best Overall:

The 6 Best Beer Bottle Openers, According to the Pros (1)

The Mamba

The Mamba “opens bottles like a traditional opener but also is able to pierce holes in cans,” says Paul Alphen, a beer enthusiast. He finds it “really does make for a smooth pour.”

He first saw a Mamba used at a bar “and thought it was a gimmick,” he says, “but [it] has become a go-to opener for cans and bottles.”

$37 SnakeBite.com

2. The Best Dual-Function Opener:

3. Most Functional:

The 6 Best Beer Bottle Openers, According to the Pros (3)

Westmark Germany Hermetus Steel 3-in-1 Resealer Beer Bottle Opener

“The Hermetus opener is my go-to tool for cracking open a bottle of beer,” says John Scholl, certified Cicerone and author of Eat Street: The ManBQue Guide to Making Street Food at Home. “It’s sturdy, opens even the waxiest of bottles with ease and seals large-format bottles to keep beer fresh and carbonated.”

Features we love: Made of stainless steel, able to reseal beer bottles, ergonomic handle and easy to clean

$12.09 Amazon

4. Most Unique Bottle Opener: Whale Shark Opener

The 6 Best Beer Bottle Openers, According to the Pros (4)

Whale Shark Opener

“For most bottles, I use a standard flat bartender’s opener,” says Maryland-based homebrewer John Thompson. “If the bottle has a wax seal, I use a Whale Shark.”

The latter is his favorite. “If I could only have one opener, it would be the Whale Shark,” says Thompson. “[It’s] simply the best opener I’ve ever had, and I’ve had a lot.”

Features we love: Handmade, customizable, cuts through wax seals, does not bend caps and is magnetic

$25 Etsy

5. Best for Home Bartenders:

The 6 Best Beer Bottle Openers, According to the Pros (5)

YOpener

“YOpeners are the perfect size; easy to find, hard to lose and feels just right in the hand,” says David Wingo, cofounder of Seasoned Sundays, a series of food and beer charity events at Wedge Oak Farm in Lebanon, Tennessee. “I also love that it was founded by a father who wanted to spend time with his autistic son.”

Features we love: Sustainably made, handmade, magnetic and does not bend caps

$Varies Etsy

6. The Best Budget Bottle Opener:

The 6 Best Beer Bottle Openers, According to the Pros (6)

The Bar Blade

In a bar setting two things are necessary: durability and speed. The bar blade, sometimes called a bartender’s opener, is a favorite.

“I’ve tried others in the past, but these are just easy and the right tool for the job,” says Moshe Atzbi, the owner of Hailey’s Harp & Pub in Metuchen, New Jersey. “No need to overcomplicate it, no need to reinvent the wheel.” He, like other bartenders, will use openers even for screw cap bottles to prevent calluses from forming on his hands and fingers.

Atzbi has about 30 bar blades in his collection. He favors all-metal ones, rather than some that have rubber grips because those have “too many places for germs to hide,” he says. On days when he is working behind the bar, he will place several at strategic spots, ready to be grabbed and used quickly.

Features we love: Budget-friendly, easy to use, durable and opens both beer bottles and cans

$9.99 Amazon

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Last Updated: May 22, 2023

The 6 Best Beer Bottle Openers, According to the Pros (2024)

FAQs

Why is a bottle opener a second class lever? ›

Levers in which load is in between effort and fulcrum are called class II levers. The image depicted here is a bottle opener. Here the effort arm is longer than load arm, moreover load is in between effort and fulcrum. So this lever is belongs to class II lever.

What was the first ever bottle opener? ›

William Painter (November 20, 1838 – July 15, 1906) was an American mechanical engineer, inventor and the founder of Crown Holdings, Inc., a Fortune 500 company. He most notably invented the crown cork bottle cap and bottle opener.

Why is the bottle opener a better option for opening the bottle? ›

The simple answer is leverage. A bottle opener provides tremendous leverage against a little bottle cap. That same bottle cap can be near impossible to open with a bare hand. Your hand provides only grip strength and virtually no leverage.

What kind of lever system is the best for popping bottles open? ›

To open the lid of a bottle, we use a bottle opener, which has load at its centre and effort is at one end of the opener, keeping the other end fix(fulcrum) on the lid. This type of machine is a second order lever.

What main advantage does a 2nd class lever give you? ›

- Second class levers always have a high mechanical advantage E.g. Standing on tip toes, or performing a press up. Second class levers have a longer effort arm. This means they can overcome heavy loads, with relatively little effort.

What is the old fashioned name for bottle opener? ›

A church key or churchkey is a North American term for various kinds of bottle openers and can openers.

What is a flat bottle opener called? ›

Speed opener ('bar blade')

The speed opener is a flat blade of steel approximately 4 cm wide and 16 cm long with a thumb hole at one end and a letterbox cut at the other to remove the crown seals from a bottle. They go under the names 'speed opener', 'popper', 'mamba', 'bar key', and most popularly 'bar blade'.

What is the oldest glass bottle? ›

The Speyer Bottle, also known as the Römerwein aus Speyer, is the oldest wine bottle in history, dating back sometime between 325 A.D and 350 A.D. It gets its name due to where it was discovered; from the tomb of a Roman noble in the modern-day region of Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany near the city of Speyer.

Why do people hit the bottom of a bottle before opening it? ›

The air trapped inside the bottle makes it difficult to open many times. Just inverting the bottle once or twice in a quick motion will do the job. Tapping and hitting with elbow to release pressure and to make that peculiar sound is the part of showmanship.

Is it better to leave water bottle open or closed? ›

It is okay to drink water left overnight as long as it is sealed or closed properly. You can still drink water from a water bottle after a week if the bottle is clean and does not show any signs of mold build-up. However, the stock water in an open glass or bottle should not be consumed the next day.

What is the pointy end of a bottle opener for? ›

The rounded end is for popping off the caps of bottles. The pointy end is used to open cans. Before pop tops and pull tabs, cans of beer or soda needed the pointy end to pop two holes into the can so they could drink the beer. They still come in handy for cans containing juice or other liquids.

What makes a Yeti so expensive? ›

Yeti has built a strong reputation for manufacturing high-quality outdoor products that are trusted by adventurers, anglers, and outdoor enthusiasts worldwide. This brand loyalty and trust contribute to the premium pricing of Yeti coolers.

Why is it called a Yeti? ›

The word "Yeti" is derived from the Tibetan term "གཡའ་དྲེད་" (pronounced "yeh-teh"), which translates to "rocky bear" or "bear-like" in English.

Can opener is a second class lever? ›

The can opener called a church-key can opener is similar to a bottle opener, except that it has a pointed end to make a hole in a can. This type of can opener is a second class lever because the fulcrum is on one end and the force, or effort, is at the other, with the resistance, or load, in the middle.

Is a bottle opener a 1st 2nd or 3rd class lever? ›

A bottle opener is an example of second class lever.

What is an example of a Class 2 lever? ›

Give some examples of second class levers.

Wheelbarrow, staplers, doors or gates, bottle openers, nutcracker, nail clippers, etc.

What uses a second class lever? ›

Second-class levers have the load between the effort and the fulcrum. A wheelbarrow is a second class lever. The wheel is the fulcrum, the handles take the effort, and the load is placed between the wheel and the effort (person doing the lifting).

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