Sign in
Pennsylvania · Updated June 2026

Pennsylvania Black Cherry Log Prices

Black Cherry is a premium cabinet and furniture hardwood prized for its rich reddish-brown heartwood that deepens with age. The Allegheny Plateau produces the finest prime cherry in the world, and clear, wide-diameter logs draw furniture-grade and export buyers. This page pairs the regional Appalachian price benchmark (International ¼" scale) with what makes the Pennsylvania market specific — live Pennsylvania listings, local buyers and mills, and the state’s own demand drivers.

Range / MBF
$110–$610
Scale
International ¼"
As of
Q3–Q4 2025
Region
Pennsylvania

How Pennsylvania Black Cherry prices break down by grade

GradeMin. Dia.Delivered $/MBFTypical Pennsylvania buyers
Veneer18"+$510–$610/MBFSliced veneer, panels, export buyers
Prime / F114"+$380–$510/MBFFlooring, premium furniture mills
Sawlog / F212"+$255–$410/MBFGeneral lumber, flooring
Sawlog / F311"+$185–$320/MBFStandard sawmills, lower-grade lumber
Construction10"+$165–$275/MBFTies, mine timbers, industrial
Pallet / Low8"+$110–$275/MBFPallets, blocking, crating

Ranges are delivered-to-mill on the International ¼" log scale. Stumpage prices paid to Pennsylvania landowners typically run 30–50% lower than delivered, depending on haul distance and harvest cost. Always confirm current pricing with your buyer — on a premium Black Cherry load, spreads between Pennsylvania buyers can exceed $60/MBF.

The Pennsylvania Black Cherry market

Pennsylvania is the historic Allegheny Plateau cherry region — the source of the finest prime Black Cherry in the world — so cherry trades stronger here than in the Kentucky market. The southeast corner commands the highest prices thanks to proximity to New Jersey and New York furniture buyers, while the northwest is softer after mill consolidation. Note that Pennsylvania mills quote on the International ¼" scale rather than Doyle.

For Black Cherry specifically in Pennsylvania: top-grade veneer and prime sawlogs see the strongest buyer competition, while standard #1–#2 grade trades around $255–$410/MBF on the International ¼" scale at the Appalachian benchmark. The price tables above are that regional benchmark (Kentucky-region estimates — KDF Q3+Q4 2025 adjusted per UK Q1 2026 survey), not a separate Pennsylvania survey — so use them as a sanity check, then get multiple bids before committing. JMLogMarket puts your load in front of buyers across the 10-state Appalachian network, not just your nearest mill.

Live Black Cherry listings in Pennsylvania

See all →

Sell Pennsylvania Black Cherry on JMLogMarket

JMLogMarket connects Pennsylvania loggers, sawmills, and landowners directly with hardwood buyers across the 10-state Appalachian belt. Free to list, no commissions, direct buyer contact. Flooring mills, furniture makers, veneer plants, and export buyers all browse JMLogMarket daily looking for inventory.

Post your load in under two minutes from any phone — species, grade, location, photos. List your Pennsylvania Black Cherry now →

Related Black Cherry & Pennsylvania pages

More Pennsylvania species prices

Black Cherry prices in other states

Pennsylvania Black Cherry log prices — FAQ

What are current Black Cherry log prices in Pennsylvania?

As a regional Appalachian benchmark (Kentucky-region estimates — KDF Q3+Q4 2025 adjusted per UK Q1 2026 survey), Black Cherry logs delivered to mill range from about $110/MBF (low/pallet grade) to $610/MBF (top veneer/prime) on the International ¼" scale. Standard #1–#2 sawlogs typically trade at $255–$410/MBF. Pennsylvania mills price against this same Appalachian baseline; stumpage paid to Pennsylvania landowners runs roughly 30–50% lower than delivered, because the buyer covers logging and hauling.

Does Pennsylvania Black Cherry sell for more or less than the benchmark?

The figures here are the regional Appalachian benchmark, not a separate Pennsylvania survey — so treat them as a starting point, not a guaranteed local quote. Where a Pennsylvania load actually lands depends on grade, haul distance to the nearest mill, and how many buyers are competing for it; spreads between individual Pennsylvania buyers on the same load can exceed $60/MBF. That is exactly why it pays to get multiple bids — JMLogMarket puts your load in front of buyers across the 10-state Appalachian belt, not just your nearest mill.

Where can I sell Black Cherry logs in Pennsylvania?

List your Pennsylvania Black Cherry loads for free on JMLogMarket and reach mills, flooring plants, furniture makers, and veneer/export buyers in Pennsylvania plus adjacent states. No commissions, direct buyer contact, photos welcome — post in under two minutes from any phone.

What grade is my Pennsylvania Black Cherry log worth?

Use our free AI Log Grader at jmlogmarket.io/ai-log-grader — upload 1–3 photos and get a USFS NE-1 grade plus a dollar-value estimate in seconds. For standing trees, try the AI Tree Grader (USFS NE-333 rules). Both account for diameter, defects, and current Black Cherry pricing.

Are these Pennsylvania Black Cherry prices delivered or stumpage?

The figures above are delivered-to-mill on the International ¼" scale — what a buyer pays when logs arrive at the gate. Stumpage (the standing-tree value paid to a Pennsylvania landowner before a logger cuts and hauls) is typically 30–50% lower, depending on volume, access, and haul distance. Always confirm which number a buyer is quoting.

Got Pennsylvania Black Cherry to sell?

List free on JMLogMarket. Direct buyer contact, no commissions, 10-state Appalachian buyer network.

Post a free listing →

Last updated June 2026. Prices shown are the regional Appalachian benchmark from the Kentucky-region estimates — KDF Q3+Q4 2025 adjusted per UK Q1 2026 survey (delivered-to-mill, International ¼" scale), applied to the Pennsylvania market as a starting reference — they are not a separate Pennsylvania price survey and are approximate. Confirm current quotes directly with your buyer. JMLogMarket publishes public-domain forestry data to help marketplace participants negotiate informed deals; we are not a price-fixing authority.