Lamy Safari vs Al-Star: Which Fountain Pen Should You Buy?
After testing both pens extensively over the past decade, I can tell you this upfront: the Lamy Safari and Lamy Al-Star are mechanically identical pens in different bodies. If you want lightweight and affordable, get the Safari; if you prefer a more substantial feel and modern aesthetics, get the Al-Star.
That’s the short answer. But there’s more nuance here than most reviews acknowledge, and after rotating these pens through my daily carry for years, I’ve identified specific scenarios where one definitively beats the other.
The Core Similarities: What You Get With Both
Before diving into differences, understand that these pens share the same DNA. Both use identical nibs, feed systems, and converters. The writing experience—what matters most—is indistinguishable between them.
The shared components include:
- Nib unit: Same steel nib in EF, F, M, B, and specialty widths
- Feed: Identical ink flow characteristics
- Converter: Both accept the Lamy Z28 piston converter
- Grip section: Same triangular grip design with molded finger guides
- Cap: Identical spring-loaded wire clip mechanism
This means nib swapping between the two is seamless. I’ve moved my favorite medium nib between Safari and Al-Star bodies countless times depending on my mood.
Build Materials: Where They Actually Differ
Lamy Safari: ABS Plastic
The Safari uses injection-molded ABS plastic—the same material in LEGO bricks. This isn’t a budget compromise; it’s an engineering choice. ABS is impact-resistant, lightweight (11 grams uncapped), and dimensionally stable across temperature swings.
After 10 years of carrying various Safaris, I’ve never seen one crack from normal use. The matte finish resists fingerprints and develops a pleasant patina over time. The translucent versions let you monitor ink levels at a glance, which I find genuinely useful with darker inks.
Lamy Al-Star: Anodized Aluminum
The Al-Star upgrades to an anodized aluminum barrel and cap. At 18 grams uncapped, it’s 64% heavier than the Safari. The anodization provides a durable, even coating that comes in more sophisticated colorways—think graphite, ocean blue, and bronze rather than the Safari’s primary colors.
The aluminum construction feels more premium in hand. That’s subjective, but after hundreds of pen demonstrations, most people instinctively perceive the Al-Star as the “nicer” pen when handling both blind.
Direct Comparison: Safari vs Al-Star
| Feature | Lamy Safari | Lamy Al-Star |
|---|---|---|
| Body Material | ABS plastic | Anodized aluminum |
| Weight (uncapped) | 11g | 18g |
| Typical Price | $25-35 | $35-45 |
| Nib Performance | Identical | Identical |
| Grip Section | Plastic (matches body) | Plastic (matches body) |
| Durability | Excellent (scratch-resistant) | Excellent (harder finish) |
| Color Options | 20+ (bright, translucent) | 15+ (muted, metallic) |
| Best For | Long writing sessions, travel | Professional settings, preference for weight |
Weight and Balance: The Real Decision Point
This is where personal preference dominates. I rotate between both pens depending on context, and the weight difference is immediately noticeable.
The Safari’s 11-gram weight makes it disappear during extended writing. During my product design work—where I might sketch or annotate for hours—the Safari never causes fatigue. It’s balanced slightly toward the nib when posted, which I prefer for detailed drawing.
The Al-Star’s 18 grams provides more feedback. You know you’re holding a pen. For short notes and signing documents, that heft feels reassuring and controlled. But during multi-hour writing sessions, I notice the difference. My hand doesn’t cramp, but there’s definitely more awareness of the tool.
One unexpected advantage of the Al-Star: the extra weight dampens micro-movements. If you have a shakier hand or write on unstable surfaces (trains, standing desks), the Al-Star’s mass helps stabilize your line work.
Aesthetics and Professional Context
The Safari reads as casual. The bright colors and plastic construction signal “utilitarian tool” rather than “refined instrument.” In creative environments, tech startups, or educational settings, this works perfectly. The Safari doesn’t pretend to be something it’s not.
The Al-Star occupies a middle ground. It’s still clearly a sub-$50 pen, but the aluminum body and understated colors (graphite, blue, bronze) pass in professional settings where a bright yellow Safari might draw comments. I’ve carried the graphite Al-Star to client presentations without second thoughts.
Neither pen screams luxury. If you need something for high-stakes business meetings, look at the Lamy 2000 instead. But for daily carry in most professional contexts, the Al-Star provides appropriate visual weight.
Grip Comfort: The Triangular Controversy
Both pens share the infamous triangular grip with molded finger guides. This is divisive, and you need to know where you stand before buying either pen.
The grip dictates your hand position. Your thumb, index, and middle fingers lock into predetermined positions. For people who already hold pens correctly (according to traditional pedagogy), this feels natural and even corrective—it prevents grip migration during long sessions.
For everyone else, it ranges from mildly annoying to dealbreaker territory. If your natural grip is unconventional, the Safari and Al-Star will fight you constantly. I’ve handed these pens to fellow designers whose grip styles simply don’t accommodate the triangular section, and they return them within minutes.
There’s no material difference here between Safari and Al-Star—both use the same molded grip geometry. Try before you buy if possible, or order from a retailer with easy returns. This is the most common reason people bounce off these otherwise excellent pens.
Practical Advantages: Safari-Specific
The Safari edges ahead in specific scenarios:
- Travel: Lighter weight in bags, less concern about dents or scratches
- Lending: The lower price point makes it easier to loan out without anxiety
- Ink visibility: Translucent models show ink levels clearly
- Variety: More color options, including special editions
- Price: Usually $10-15 cheaper for identical writing performance
I keep a charcoal Safari inked with Pilot Iroshizuku Take-Sumi in my travel bag permanently. If it gets lost or damaged, I’m out $30, not $45.
Practical Advantages: Al-Star-Specific
The Al-Star wins in different contexts:
- Perception: Reads as more “serious” in professional environments
- Durability: Aluminum body resists flex and maintains tighter tolerances long-term
- Colorways: More sophisticated, muted tones for understated carry
- Tactile feedback: Some writers prefer the extra weight for control
- Temperature: Aluminum feels cooler to the touch in hot weather (subjective pro or con)
My graphite Al-Star stays on my desk for client-facing work. The aluminum construction has maintained tighter cap-posting tolerances after five years of daily use compared to my older Safari bodies, which have developed slight play.
Nib Performance: Actually Identical
This deserves its own section because marketing often obscures the truth: these pens use the same nibs. Not “similar”—literally identical. Lamy’s steel nibs are manufactured to the same specifications regardless of which body they’re installed in.
The nibs are good, not great. They’re reliable writers with moderate flow, smooth enough for daily use, with slight feedback that helps with control. The medium is a true Western medium—noticeably broader than Japanese equivalents. The extra-fine is more like a Japanese fine.
Quality control is acceptable but not flawless. I’ve purchased 15+ Safari/Al-Star pens over the years, and two arrived with baby’s bottom issues (the tipping is over-polished, causing skipping). Both were easily corrected with minor adjustments, but premium pens shouldn’t require this.
The real advantage: Lamy nibs swap without tools in 10 seconds. Buy one Lamy replacement nib in a different size, and suddenly both your Safari and Al-Star become two pens each.
Which Should You Actually Buy?
Get the Safari if:
- You write for extended periods daily
- You prefer lightweight pens that disappear in hand
- You want translucent bodies to monitor ink levels
- You’re trying fountain pens for the first time and want minimal investment
- You value maximum color variety and special editions
Get the Al-Star if:
- You prefer pens with more physical presence and weight
- You carry the pen in professional or client-facing contexts
- You appreciate anodized aluminum aesthetics and feel
- You want more sophisticated, muted color options
- The $10-15 price difference is irrelevant to your decision
Get both if:
- You want a heavy desk pen (Al-Star) and a light travel pen (Safari)
- You appreciate having options depending on context and mood
- You want to experiment with multiple fountain pen inks simultaneously
What I Actually Carry
In my current rotation: a charcoal Safari with an EF nib for travel and sketching, and a graphite Al-Star with a medium nib for desk work and client meetings. This covers 95% of my use cases.
If I could only keep one? The Safari. The weight advantage during long design sessions outweighs the Al-Star’s aesthetic edge. But this reflects my specific use pattern—heavy daily writing and sketching. If I used fountain pens primarily for signing documents and short notes, the Al-Star would win.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Lamy Al-Star worth the extra cost over the Safari?
Only if you value the aluminum construction and aesthetics. The writing experience is identical, so you’re paying $10-15 purely for material and appearance. If weight preference and professional appearance matter to you, yes. If you prioritize pure functionality, no.
Can you swap nibs between the Safari and Al-Star?
Yes, instantly and without tools. The nib units are completely interchangeable across all Safari, Al-Star, and even LX models. Pull the old nib straight out, push the new one straight in. Takes 10 seconds and requires zero technical skill.
Which pen is more durable for daily carry?
Both are extremely durable for different reasons. The Safari’s ABS plastic absorbs impacts without denting and resists scratches well. The Al-Star’s anodized aluminum is harder and maintains tighter tolerances long-term, but can develop small dings if dropped on hard surfaces. Neither will fail from normal use—pick based on weight preference, not durability concerns.
Do the Safari and Al-Star use the same converter and ink cartridges?
Yes, both accept standard Lamy converters (Z28 piston converter is recommended) and Lamy T10 ink cartridges. All ink-related components are completely interchangeable between the two pens.
Will the triangular grip bother me?
It depends entirely on your natural grip. If you hold pens with a traditional tripod grip (thumb, index, middle finger), you’ll likely find it comfortable or even corrective. If you have an unconventional grip, it may range from annoying to unusable. Try to test one in person before buying, or order from a retailer with easy returns. This is the most polarizing aspect of both pens.
About Alex Chen
Product Designer · Fountain Pen Collector
Product designer by trade, fountain pen obsessive by choice. 10 years collecting, 200+ pens tested. I apply an engineer’s eye to nib geometry, ink flow, and build quality. Read more →
