Beyotool Putty Knife, 4Pcs Spackle Knife Set (2, 3, 4, 5 in), Stainless Steel Paint Scraper, Taping Knife Tool for Repairing Drywall, Removing Wallpaper, Applying Putty, Plaster, Cement, Adhesive

Putty Knife, 4Pcs Spackle Knife Set (2, 3, 4, 5 in), Stainless Steel Paint Scraper, Taping Knife Tool for Repairing Drywall, Removing Wallpaper, Applying Putty, Plaster, Cement, Adhesive

Features

  • Sturdy Design: The blade and handle in our drywall knife are processed in one piece, which is very sturdy. Stainless steel blade has superior load-bearing performance for a long time to use
  • Comfortable Grip: The handle part is a perfect combination of soft rubber and plastic, and using an ergonomic design. Our putty scraper tool makes full use of the elasticity of rubber to make you hold comfortably
  • Anti-Rust Quality: Compared with carbon steel material, our stainless steel spackle knife tool is far stronger in terms of corrosion resistance. The rust-free blade makes you more enjoyable to work in home improvement jobs
  • Various Sizes: Our joint knife covers four sizes of width, 2", 3", 4", 5". The small size is suitable for applying adhesives, and drywall tape. The large size is ideal for applying putty, plaster, and other home improvement materials
  • Widely Apllication: It’s more effortless to apply putty, plaster, cement, and concrete with a putty knife scraper. You can repair and fill the cracks in drywall, ceiling, ceramic tile. In addition, it's perfect for removing paint, sticky objects, and wallpaper

Specifications

Size 2,3,4,5in

Four-piece set of stainless steel putty knives (2, 3, 4, 5 in) for applying and smoothing putty, plaster, drywall compound and adhesives, and for scraping paint, wallpaper or other materials. One-piece blade-and-handle construction provides strength, and ergonomic rubber-plastic grips plus corrosion-resistant stainless steel help durability and handling.

Model Number: Beyotool-putty

Beyotool Putty Knife, 4Pcs Spackle Knife Set (2, 3, 4, 5 in), Stainless Steel Paint Scraper, Taping Knife Tool for Repairing Drywall, Removing Wallpaper, Applying Putty, Plaster, Cement, Adhesive Review

4.6 out of 5

What you get in the set

Beyotool’s putty knife set covers the essentials: four stainless-steel blades at 2, 3, 4, and 5 inches. That spread hits most tasks I see in day-to-day patching and light finishing—small dings, taped seams, skim touch-ups, and scraping chores. All four share a one-piece blade-and-core construction with a rubber/plastic overmold, so there are no rivets or bolsters to loosen over time. The stainless is corrosion resistant, and the handles are shaped to keep your hand in line with the blade, which matters when you’re trying to feather compound or push through stubborn adhesive.

Build and ergonomics

The standout here is the single-piece metal core. On multi-piece knives, handles can wiggle or rivets can work loose after a few messy projects; I’ve had none of that here. The overmolded grip has just enough give to stay comfortable during longer sessions, and it doesn’t turn slick with compound or water. The balance is light—these are not heavy demolition scrapers—and that’s actually an asset when you’re finishing surfaces.

Blade thickness skews toward flexible rather than pry-bar stiff. That’s a tradeoff: flex is your friend for feathering joint compound, but you won’t want to abuse these on stubborn linoleum or mortar. The factory edges on my set were clean and true with square corners. For drywall work, I like to ease the outer corners on the 4- and 5-inch blades with a couple passes of fine sandpaper to reduce accidental gouges. If you do more scraping than finishing, keep them sharp and square.

In use: drywall and patching

I ran the set through a typical patching workflow:

  • 2-inch: great as a putty scoop, for pressing mesh patches, and working in tight spots around trim.
  • 3-inch: my default for filling nail pops and small divots. The blade has enough spring to lay compound without ridges.
  • 4-inch: very good for first coats over tape—wide enough to cover seams but still easy to control.
  • 5-inch: ideal for second coats and light skim work. You can get a soft feather without fighting the blade.

The flex pattern scales with width, as it should: smaller blades feel noticeably stiffer, the larger ones have more give. Applying compound, I could keep a consistent pressure line, and cleanup between passes was quick since dried mud flicks off stainless without drama. If you’re finishing a whole room or chasing dead-flat walls, you’ll want to add an 8–12-inch taping knife and a mud pan to your kit. But for patch-and-paint projects and small skim repairs, this set covers the bases nicely.

Wallpaper, paint, and adhesive removal

For scraping chores, I rotated between the 3- and 5-inch blades. On painted trim with drips, the stainless edge cut cleanly once I scored with a utility knife. When lifting wallpaper after a perforator and warm water, the 4-inch had the right compromise of width and flex to get under the paper without chewing up the facing. The corners are crisp, which is useful for scoring but can nick drywall paper if you get aggressive; easing those corners as mentioned helps.

On adhesive—old carpet glue on a concrete slab—the knives worked, but this is where their lighter build shows. They will deflect if you lean hard. For broad, sticky residue and finish scraping, they’re fine; for hardened thinset, tile mastic, or thicker epoxy blobs, a heavier-duty floor scraper or a thicker putty knife is a better tool.

Comfort and control

The handles deserve credit. They’re shaped to index your thumb naturally on top for push strokes and allow a comfortable pinch grip for finesse. The rubberized sections provide traction when wet, and I didn’t experience hot spots after an afternoon of patching and sanding. The weight is low, which reduces arm fatigue but also encourages a lighter touch—good for finishing, less so for brute scraping. I didn’t notice any flex or creak from the handle-core interface, which is often where budget knives give up first.

Cleaning and maintenance

Stainless was the right choice here. Joint compound rinses off easily, and dried specks can be scraped away without pitting. After scraping wallpaper paste and water-based adhesives, a rinse and wipe-down left no staining. The blades resisted surface corrosion after sitting damp, which isn’t the case with carbon steel knives unless you’re diligent about oiling. The overmold didn’t swell or separate after repeated wet/dry cycles. I still recommend a quick dry and hang after use, but these are not fussy tools.

If you prefer a slightly “broken-in” edge for finishing, a quick pass on 400–600 grit sandpaper can polish out micro burrs and make the 5-inch glide even more smoothly. I didn’t find that necessary out of the box; it’s just a personal preference for final skim coats.

Durability

After several home projects—patches, a small bathroom seam repair, and a weekend of scraping—the set shows typical scuffing but no bending or permanent waves in the blades. The one-piece construction feels stable, and the grips haven’t loosened. That said, they are thin enough to flex by design; using them to pry trim or pop countertop caulk at steep angles will shorten their life. Treat them like finishing knives and they’ll hold up.

Limitations and wish list

  • Blade stiffness: The flex that helps with finishing limits heavy scraping and prying. If you need a rigid scraper, supplement the set with a thicker, single-width tool.
  • Width range: 5 inches is as wide as it gets here. For broad tape joints or serious skim coating, plan to add an 8–12-inch knife or a wider taping blade.
  • Corners: Sharp from the factory. Great for scoring, but ease them if you’re nervous about gouges on soft drywall paper.

None of these are flaws so much as consequences of the design brief: lightweight, stainless, and versatile across finishing tasks.

Who it’s for

  • DIYers and renters doing patch-and-paint repairs, light skim coats, or occasional wallpaper/mastic removal.
  • Pros who want a secondary set that can live in a job box or be kept clean for finish work.
  • Hobbyists and crafters who benefit from multiple widths and a smooth stainless edge for spreading adhesives or compounds.

If your work leans toward demolition, tile removal, or aggressive scraping, a heavier scraper is a better fit, with this set reserved for the finishing stages.

Value

This is a budget-friendly set that doesn’t behave like one. You’re getting four usable widths, stainless blades, and a one-piece core that outlasts many multi-rivet handles. It’s not a boutique, ultra-stiff set, but the performance-to-price ratio is strong. I’ve seen pricier individual knives that don’t offer better finish results.

Recommendation

I recommend the Beyotool putty knife set for anyone who needs a reliable, stainless lineup for patching, taping, and light scraping. The one-piece construction, comfortable grips, and sensible width range make it easy to get clean results. The blades are on the thinner, more flexible side, which is exactly what you want for feathering compound but not what you want for prying or hammering through hardened adhesives. Pair this set with a wider taping knife and a rigid scraper, and you’ll cover nearly all wall and trim prep tasks without overspending.



Project Ideas

Business

Small restoration & patching service

Offer targeted drywall repair, crack filling, and paint-ready patching for landlords and Airbnb hosts. The stainless steel knives are ideal for consistent skim coats and fast turnaround, allowing you to build recurring maintenance contracts.


Furniture upcycle and refinish shop

Run a micro-business that buys beat-up furniture, uses the putty knives to remove flaking paint, apply wood filler, and create controlled distressing, then resells pieces online or in local markets for a markup.


DIY texturing workshops

Teach hands-on classes (in-person or virtual) on techniques like Venetian plaster basics, textured wall panels, and mixed-media canvases using putty knives. Charge per seat and upsell starter tool kits featuring the 4-piece set.


Curated repair & starter kits

Assemble and sell ready-to-use kits for renters and homeowners: include the 4-piece knife set, a small tub of joint compound, sandpaper, gloves, and a step-by-step guide or QR-code video. Sell via Etsy, Amazon, or local hardware consignment.


Short-form content & affiliate funnel

Create a social feed (TikTok/Instagram/YouTube Shorts) showing quick before/after repair and creative techniques using the knives. Monetize with affiliate links to the tool set, digital class signups, and downloadable project plans to drive passive income.

Creative

Mini textured canvas series

Use the 2–5" blades to apply modeling paste, acrylic gel, or heavy body paint in layers. Create a set of small canvases that explore different strokes (thin 2" lines, wide 5" smooth planes), scrape back layers to reveal colors underneath, and seal for gallery-ready textured wall art.


Upcycled mosaic serving trays

Attach tiles or broken china to shallow wooden trays, use the 3" or 4" knife to spread grout evenly, then use the edge to scrape excess and profile grout lines for crisp results. Finish with paint-distressed edges created by controlled scraping.


Resin & embedded-coaster finishing

Pour small resin pieces and use the 2" putty knife to spread resin, remove bubbles, and feather edges. After curing, use the 4–5" knives to level and trim overflow, producing clean, professional coaster and tray edges.


Faux-weathered furniture accents

Apply joint compound or wood filler as raised motifs, then scrape and sand selectively with different blade widths to reveal substrate layers and create custom chipping/patina effects. Great for making ‘aged’ picture frames, small side tables, and cabinet fronts.


Clay slab texturing & relief plates

When working with slab pottery, use the wide knives to level and smooth joints, and the narrow knives to carve scrapes and comb-like textures into leather-hard clay for decorative plates, tiles, and wall panels.