
In some forests, there is a small fortune lying around:
sometimes in the form of oak trees, sometimes in the form of
maple trees.
Fashion also determines the price of wood
The price of wood is determined by various factors: the type of
wood with its technical properties such as hardness, durability,
and weight. The rarity of a tree also plays a role; the rarer it
is, the more sought-after it is. Aesthetic considerations are
also important, such as color, structure, grain, and even
fashion trends, i.e., whether the wood is currently in vogue.
The desirability and quality of the wood must match
When evaluating high wood prices for different tree species,
perspective is important. Are we talking about the average price
of a type of wood? The price per cubic meter? Or the price of a
single log? In any case, there are some eye-openers for those
outside the industry. Looking at the record price per cubic
meter, the picture is as follows: Maple, service tree, oak,
walnut, and spruce have what it takes to fetch top prices.
This does not mean that you should store wood instead of gold in
your vault; top prices are achieved at auctions where
exceptional qualities meet the desires of buyers. Here are a few
examples of how forest owners have earned good money.
The top 5 types of wood
-- Sycamore maple produces a highly sought-after wood,
especially in its curly maple variant, which has a distinctive
grain. At the central Hessian timber auction, a buyer paid
€12,689 per cubic meter, totaling €32,230 for 2.54 cubic meters
of trunk. At a timber auction held by ThüringenForst in Erfurt-Willrode,
the price was €6,280 per cubic meter, or €9,796 for the trunk.
-- There are rumors of prices of up to €14,000 per cubic meter
for service trees (Zu Elsbeeren geistern Zahlen von bis zu
14.000 Euro pro Festmeter herum.). The absolute top price is
documented, with a service tree from the Arnstadt Forestry
Office fetching €4,400 per cubic meter.
-- Oak is also among the frontrunners: an English oak trunk
fetched €3,489 per cubic meter at the Malchin valuable timber
auction in early 2026. At the end of 2024, oak trunks from the
state forest of the Wettenberg Forestry Office fetched €3,342
per cubic meter and a total price of €12,131.46.
-- In Lower Austria, walnut wood sold for €3,010 per solid cubic
meter in 2024. In 2021, there was already a bid of €2,878 per
solid cubic meter.
-- Incidentally, even though spruce trees are considered the
bread and butter of forestry, they can also fetch the highest
prices. At €1,113 per cubic meter, the trunk from Schnann, a
village in western Tyrol, achieved the highest price ever paid
for a trunk at the Tyrolean auction. That is quite
extraordinary. In 2024, spruce in the Coburg region also fetched
a remarkable price of €468 per solid cubic meter.
Globally, woods fetch even higher prices.
For all those who see dollar signs in their eyes, it is
important to remember that trees need time to grow and produce
the coveted wood. And that top-quality wood is sometimes rare
because a lot can happen in the lifetime of a tree.
If you look overseas, you will also find types of wood that make
our oak, maple, and service trees look like bargains. African
ebony, for example, costs between 10,000 and 15,000 euros per
cubic meter. Even more is asked for agarwood, also known as oud.
It is a rare and precious, resinous wood. It is produced in the
core of Aquilaria trees when they are infected by a certain
mold. It is said that 100,000 euros have already been offered
for the wood.
Source:
agrarheute.com