Masons and DIYers who want a stainless blade that resists rust better than carbon steel, backed by nearly 1,000 reviews of real use.
Skip if
Buyers who need the exact handle material or blade length spelled out before buying, since neither is listed here.
Material Stainless Steel
Priced 46% above the category median ($16.21 across 42 tracked models)
Our scorecard
4.6/5overall
Owner rating4.6/5
4.6 average across 970 owner ratings
Popularity4.6/5
970 owner reviews, more 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 hand tools and workshop hand tools 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
The Goldblatt G06907AE is a stainless steel masonry trowel priced at $23.70. It holds a 4.6 star rating across 970 reviews, the highest review count of any trowel in this comparison, with 100 buyers a month.
Stainless steel resists corrosion and rust better than carbon steel, which matters for a tool that spends its life in wet mortar. The listing does not specify a handle material or blade length, so buyers comparing grip type or reach to other Goldblatt trowels will need to look elsewhere for that detail.
With 970 reviews behind it, this is one of the most proven trowels in the lineup, and the 4.6 star average holding across that many buyers is a strong signal rather than an early spike.
Pros
Stainless steel blade resists rust and corrosion better than carbon steel
4.6 star rating across 970 reviews, the largest review count in this comparison
100 buyers a month shows consistent, ongoing demand
Competitively priced at $23.70 among the stainless options here
Cons
No handle material is listed, so grip type can't be compared to other Goldblatt models
No blade length or weight spec is given, making size hard to judge before buying
Specifications
Material
Stainless Steel
Performance notes
Stainless steel blades like this one are generally chosen over carbon steel for jobs where the tool gets wet often, since they shrug off rust without extra care. The tradeoff versus carbon steel is usually a slightly less keen edge for cutting mortar.
What buyers say
970 reviews at a 4.6 star average, plus 100 buyers a month, is one of the strongest combinations of proof and rating in this lineup.
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