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Updated April 2026 · Rot-resistant heartwood — high demand for outdoor applications
🌲 Durable Southern Softwood

Cypress Logs
for Sale & Wanted

Taxodium distichum — Bald Cypress / Southern Cypress

Bald Cypress (Taxodium distichum) is a deciduous conifer native to the swamps, bayous, and river bottoms of the southeastern United States. Unlike most conifers, cypress sheds its needles each fall — giving rise to the name 'bald.' The heartwood is pale yellowish-brown to reddish-brown, with a straight, even grain and a distinctive greasy feel when freshly sawn. Its most prized characteristic is extraordinary natural rot resistance, owing to a resinous oil called cypressene in the heartwood. Old-growth 'sinker' cypress pulled from riverbeds can exceed 500 years in age and commands premium prices from specialty millers.

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$300–$1400
Per MBF (Doyle)
510 lbf
Janka Hardness
51 lbs/ft³
Green Weight
Strong
Market Trend
Select / Clear
$700–$1,400
Millwork, siding, exterior trim
Standard #1
$400–$700
Decking, fencing, general construction
Pecky / Character
$600–$1,200
Paneling, rustic interiors, specialty

Market Insight — Cypress 2026

Modern second-growth cypress is the dominant market supply, with logs typically harvested from managed stands in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. The wood's combination of dimensional stability, natural decay resistance, and workability makes it a preferred choice for siding, shingles, exterior trim, coffin boards, water tanks, docks, and boat interiors. 'Pecky' cypress — cypress containing pockets caused by Stereum taxodii fungus — is a highly sought-after decorative wood for paneling and interior design, often bringing a significant premium over clear stock.

Cypress pricing runs higher than most Southern softwoods owing to specialty demand. Standard delivered sawlog prices range from $300–$700/MBF (Doyle), while large-diameter old-growth or sinker logs can bring $1,000–$2,500/MBF or more. Prime cypress for pecky paneling, marine applications, or restoration-grade architectural work commands the highest prices. Demand is strongest from coastal builders, boat yards, custom millwork shops, and outdoor furniture manufacturers.

About Cypress Timber

Bald Cypress (Taxodium distichum) is a deciduous conifer native to the swamps, bayous, and river bottoms of the southeastern United States. Unlike most conifers, cypress sheds its needles each fall — giving rise to the name 'bald.' The heartwood is pale yellowish-brown to reddish-brown, with a straight, even grain and a distinctive greasy feel when freshly sawn. Its most prized characteristic is extraordinary natural rot resistance, owing to a resinous oil called cypressene in the heartwood. Old-growth 'sinker' cypress pulled from riverbeds can exceed 500 years in age and commands premium prices from specialty millers.

Modern second-growth cypress is the dominant market supply, with logs typically harvested from managed stands in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. The wood's combination of dimensional stability, natural decay resistance, and workability makes it a preferred choice for siding, shingles, exterior trim, coffin boards, water tanks, docks, and boat interiors. 'Pecky' cypress — cypress containing pockets caused by Stereum taxodii fungus — is a highly sought-after decorative wood for paneling and interior design, often bringing a significant premium over clear stock.

Cypress pricing runs higher than most Southern softwoods owing to specialty demand. Standard delivered sawlog prices range from $300–$700/MBF (Doyle), while large-diameter old-growth or sinker logs can bring $1,000–$2,500/MBF or more. Prime cypress for pecky paneling, marine applications, or restoration-grade architectural work commands the highest prices. Demand is strongest from coastal builders, boat yards, custom millwork shops, and outdoor furniture manufacturers.

Regional note: Grown in the South (LA, MS, AL, GA, FL, AR) with scattered populations north into KY/TN river bottoms.
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Exterior Siding

Natural weather resistance

Boat Building

Interiors, coamings, trim

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Decks & Docks

Decay resistant in wet service

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Pecky Paneling

Decorative interior feature walls

Cypress Grades & What Buyers Pay

Grade Key Requirements Typical Buyers Delivered Price Range
Prime / Select 16"+ SED, 10'+ clear face Specialty mills, restoration, marine $900–$1,400/MBF
Select / No. 1 14"+ SED, 8'+ clear face Millwork shops, siding manufacturers $600–$900/MBF
No. 2 / Standard 12"+ SED, 6'+ clear Fence mills, dimensional lumber producers $400–$600/MBF
Pecky / Character 12"+ SED, sound pecky pockets Panel mills, custom interior shops $600–$1,200/MBF
Delivered gate prices on the Doyle log scale, 2025–2026 market conditions. Prices vary by region, season, and buyer demand. Full hardwood price guide →

Tips for Selling Cypress

  • Separate heartwood from sapwood. Only the heartwood carries cypress's famous rot resistance. Sapwood rots like any other softwood. Mills pay premium prices for all-heart cypress, so if your logs have significant sapwood, note it honestly in your listing — buyers will ask.
  • Pecky cypress is a feature, not a defect. If your logs contain the characteristic fungal pockets, list them as pecky cypress and expect a premium. Don't mix pecky and clear logs in the same load unless you're selling at the lower price — they have different buyers.
  • Old-growth / sinker cypress commands special treatment. If you have very old-growth logs or recovered sinker cypress (pulled from rivers or swamps), contact specialty cypress mills directly. Pricing for this material is negotiated, not by standard grade schedules — $2,000-$5,000/MBF is possible for exceptional stock.
  • Mind the species — Southern vs. Pond. Buyers distinguish bald cypress (Taxodium distichum) from pond cypress (Taxodium ascendens). Bald cypress is preferred for most commercial uses. Pond cypress is still marketable but at slightly lower prices due to more variable grain.
  • Plan transport carefully. Cypress logs from deep-swamp sites often need specialty hauling. Account for access cost when quoting — a buyer paying $700/MBF at the gate won't help you much if trucking is $300/MBF.

Frequently Asked Questions About Cypress Logs

What are cypress logs worth?

Delivered cypress sawlog prices typically run $400–$900 per MBF (Doyle) for standard grade, $700–$1,400 for Select, and $900–$2,500 for prime large-diameter logs suitable for millwork or marine applications. Pecky cypress — containing the sought-after fungal pockets — brings $600–$1,200/MBF depending on pocket distribution. Sinker cypress pulled from rivers or old-growth salvage can exceed $2,500/MBF for exceptional material.

Why is cypress lumber expensive?

Cypress's price reflects three factors: (1) limited range — productive cypress swamps exist only in the southeastern coastal plain; (2) slow growth — merchantable logs are often 60-100+ years old; (3) exceptional rot resistance, which makes it the default choice for outdoor applications where pressure-treated pine is unacceptable. As old-growth supply has dwindled, second-growth cypress has become the standard, but prices remain well above pine or fir.

What is pecky cypress?

Pecky cypress is heartwood containing small, elongated pockets caused by the fungus Stereum taxodii. The fungus only attacks older trees and stops growing once the tree is milled. The resulting pockets create a striking rustic pattern highly prized for paneling, accent walls, cabinetry, and ceiling beams. Pecky cypress typically commands a 30-50% premium over standard cypress.

Can I sell cypress logs outside the Deep South?

Yes. While most cypress stands are in the Gulf states, buyers source logs nationwide — especially restoration contractors, custom millwork shops, and boat builders in the Northeast and Midwest. Scattered cypress grows north into the Ohio River bottoms and southern Illinois. If you have merchantable cypress in the Appalachian region or beyond, post it on JMLogMarket to reach buyers directly.

How is cypress graded?

Cypress logs are graded on diameter, clear face length, and soundness — similar to hardwood grading rules. Prime grade requires 16"+ small-end diameter with 10+ feet of clear face. Select is 14"+ SED with 8+ feet clear. No. 2 is 12"+ SED with some allowable defect. Pecky cypress is graded separately based on pocket distribution and the percentage of character in the face.

Is cypress better than pressure-treated pine for outdoor use?

For most exposed applications, yes. Untreated cypress heartwood naturally resists rot, fungus, and insects for 30-50+ years, compared to 15-25 years for pressure-treated pine in direct ground contact. Cypress is also dimensionally stable and accepts finishes well. Sapwood does not have the same rot resistance as heartwood — quality cypress for outdoor use should be all-heart material.

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Related Cypress Resources

Pine Logs →
Another Southern softwood with different use cases — construction lumber and paneling.
Log Hauling →
Find haulers to move your Cypress logs.
Full Price Guide →
All species, all grades — current Appalachian hardwood pricing.
Log Grading Guide →
How buyers grade logs — what qualifies for Select vs. #2.

Current Cypress Listings

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