German Timber Prices

German Timber Prices are Rising Sharply and Sawmills pay forest owners new record prices

On the timber market, German Timber prices for spruce and pine in 2026 are higher than ever before. Timber is currently so scarce that the timber industry has once again raised timber prices significantly at the beginning of 2026. Forest farmers are receiving higher revenues for coniferous roundwood than ever before. At the same time, sawmills are facing empty warehouses, skyrocketing costs, and an acute “raw material shortage.” In any case, the rising prices indicate an extremely tight market supply. Lower-quality wood, industrial wood, and energy wood are now also benefiting from the shortage.

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The ongoing and, in some cases, extreme shortage of wood has prompted the sawmill industry to raise wood prices significantly once again for the first quarter of 2026, according to forest owner associations. The price increases for the leading spruce B 2b+ range are between 5 and 10 euros per solid cubic meter.

Pine wood is also benefiting from this extraordinary price rally. At the beginning of 2026, new record prices will be reached for both spruce and pine wood. For the leading spruce B 2b+ grade, net prices at the beginning of January will average between 129 and 132 euros per solid cubic meter, and in some cases even higher. Due to very strong demand for the 2b+ assortment in grade B/C, an average of 95 to 98 euros per cubic meter is being paid for pine wood.

This means that forest owners along the “Waldstraße” are being paid around €25 to €30 more than last year. In sawmills that need and process fresh logs, warehouses in many places are empty because very little fresh wood is still being delivered, according to forest owners.

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The German Federal Association of the Wood Industry describes the current market development as a “raw material shortage.” If more wood does not come onto the market in the coming weeks, the situation will escalate into an “existential crisis for the sawmill and timber industry,” according to the timber industry.

The extreme shortage has apparently been caused by the very low supply of so-called damaged wood, which, according to the Bavarian State Institute for Forestry and Forest Management, accounts for a good half of the timber harvested and thus also covers half of the supply. This wood is now missing from the market, which hardly distinguishes between beetle-damaged/damaged wood and undamaged wood in terms of price.

Source: agrarheute.com

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