Log Weight Calculator for Tree Logs, Hauling, and Equipment Planning

Estimate log weight by species, diameter, length, taper, moisture condition, and quantity. This calculator helps with trailer loading, skid steer and excavator planning, stump removal projects, milling prep, and jobsite material handling.

Updated June 2026 Free, No Signup Required Sources Cited No Data Stored or Transmitted Last Reviewed June 25, 2026

Built by Muhammad Ramzan Babar, physics researcher (PhD candidate). Reviewed by site author.

🪵 Calculate Log Weight

Imperial mode works best for U.S. land clearing, hauling, and sawmill planning.
Green logs weigh much more because of moisture content.
Species changes density, which changes weight even when dimensions stay the same.
#
Enter the number of similar logs in the batch.

📏 Straight Log Dimensions

in
ft
Use average diameter and actual log length.
in
Optional if the log is not an exact whole-foot length.

How This Log Weight Estimator Works

1
📏

Measure diameter and length

Use a straight-log method for a quick estimate or a tapered method when you know both diameters. Tapered logs usually produce a better field estimate.

2
🌲

Select the wood species

Species changes density. A red oak log can weigh far more than the same-size eastern white pine log.

3
💧

Choose green or seasoned wood

Fresh-cut logs contain high moisture content, so green wood weight is usually much higher than seasoned wood weight.

4
🚚

Review load and hauling results

See weight in pounds, kilograms, and tons, along with load notes for trailers, loaders, and site staging.

Quick Density Guide for Common Log Species

Weight estimates depend on species and moisture condition. USDA Forest Products Laboratory references show that specific gravity and moisture content strongly affect wood density and therefore total log weight.

Species Approx. Green Weight Approx. Dry or Seasoned Weight Typical Use Context
Eastern White Pine About 50 lb/ft³ About 25 lb/ft³ Light softwood, easier hauling and handling
Douglas-fir About 53 lb/ft³ About 33 lb/ft³ Structural timber, milling, framing stock
Southern Yellow Pine About 59 lb/ft³ About 41 lb/ft³ Dense softwood, treated products, utility use
Yellow-Poplar About 50 lb/ft³ About 29 lb/ft³ Moderate handling load, common in mixed clearing
Red Maple About 56 lb/ft³ About 34 lb/ft³ General hardwood, moderate haul weight
Red Oak About 63 lb/ft³ About 44 lb/ft³ Heavy hardwood, trailer and loader planning matters
White Oak About 64 lb/ft³ About 47 lb/ft³ Very heavy hardwood, common in removal jobs
Hickory About 64 lb/ft³ About 50 lb/ft³ High-density log, often difficult to handle manually

💡 Field reminder

A log weight estimate is only as good as the diameter and species input. A small diameter error creates a much larger weight error because log volume scales with the square of diameter.

Why Log Weight Matters on Construction and Land-Clearing Jobs

Log weight affects hauling, equipment sizing, labor planning, disposal cost, and safety. If a trailer, loader, or crane pick is undersized, even one heavy hardwood log can create a serious field problem.

This matters on clearing pads, excavation access routes, storm cleanup, rural building sites, and milling prep. It also matters when you are comparing timber removal against fill replacement, base preparation, or budget planning.

Volume and weight are not the same

Volume tells you how much wood is present, usually in cubic feet. Weight adds species and moisture, which is why two logs with the same size can have very different hauling weights.

Moisture changes the answer

USDA Forest Products Laboratory publications explain that density changes with specific gravity and moisture content. That is why green logs should not be priced or lifted using dry-wood assumptions.

Where this tool fits in a job workflow

Use this estimate before trailer loading, stump disposal, milling, or clearing cost planning. After that, you may move into a project budget calculator, an excavation calculator, or a backfill calculator if the site work continues after removal.

Example Scenarios

Red Oak Removal Log

Diameter: 20 in

Length: 12 ft

Species: Red Oak, green

Quick cylinder volume: \(\pi \times (0.8333\text{ ft})^2 \times 12 \approx 26.18\text{ ft}^3\)

Using about 63 lb/ft³ for green red oak gives an estimated weight near 1,649 lb before any bark allowance. That is already close to the safe handling limit of many small-loader attachments.

Douglas-fir Milling Log

Diameter: 16 in

Length: 10 ft

Species: Douglas-fir, green

Quick cylinder volume: \(\pi \times (0.6667\text{ ft})^2 \times 10 \approx 13.96\text{ ft}^3\)

At about 53 lb/ft³, the estimated log weight is about 740 lb before bark allowance. That is often workable with a skid steer or compact loader, depending on attachment rating.

Firewood Pine Log Batch

Diameter: 14 in

Length: 8 ft

Species: Eastern White Pine, seasoned

Quick cylinder volume: \(\pi \times (0.5833\text{ ft})^2 \times 8 \approx 8.55\text{ ft}^3\)

At about 25 lb/ft³, the estimated weight is about 214 lb per log before bark allowance. That is a very different hauling profile than the red oak example above.

Common Log Weight Errors

1

Using dry lumber weight tables for fresh-cut logs. Green wood can weigh dramatically more than seasoned material.

2

Ignoring taper. A single-diameter cylinder estimate is fast, but a tapered log can be better estimated with Smalian-style volume logic.

3

Measuring bark-to-bark inconsistently across different logs. Diameter measurement quality controls the estimate.

4

Forgetting quantity. One 800 lb log may be manageable, but ten similar logs create a 4-ton hauling and staging problem.

5

Treating a planning estimate as a legal transport or certified scale weight. Trailer limits and road compliance still need verification.

Hauling, Removal, and Site Planning Context

This tool is useful when clearing building pads, removing trees near foundations, staging saw logs, or pricing cleanup after excavation. Weight estimates help you choose between hand labor, skid steer handling, or larger equipment.

Related estimating workflow

After log removal, many jobs move straight into grading and fill work. In that case, the next useful tools are the fill dirt calculator, topsoil calculator, base material calculator, and gravel calculator.

Wood versus other material loads

If you are comparing timber against structural or salvage materials, check the aluminum weight calculator, steel weight calculator, and glass weight calculator. That makes mixed-load trailer planning more realistic.

⚠️ Transport note

NIST Handbook 130 defines a cord as 128 cubic feet of neatly piled wood including air space, but that does not tell you the exact solid-wood weight of loose logs on a trailer. Individual log weight still depends on species, moisture, and geometry.

Log Weight Questions

How accurate is a log weight calculator? +

It is a planning estimate. Accuracy depends on diameter measurement, species selection, moisture condition, taper, and whether bark is included. The estimate improves when you use a tapered log method instead of a single-diameter shortcut.

Why are green logs so much heavier? +

Green logs still contain high moisture content. USDA Forest Products Laboratory references show that moisture content and density strongly affect green and dry wood weight.

What volume formula is used for a tapered log? +

This tool can use a Smalian-style approach for tapered logs. That method uses the average of the end areas multiplied by length, and it is commonly used in cubic log volume estimating.

Does bark count in log weight? +

It can. This calculator allows a rough bark allowance for field planning because bark adds weight and changes total load. Exact bark percentage varies by species and condition.

Can I use this for firewood cord estimates? +

Use it to estimate the weight of the logs themselves. A legal cord is a stacked volume measure, 128 cubic feet including air space, so the result is not the same as the sale measure of a stacked cord.

What should I do after estimating log weight? +

Use the result to plan equipment, trailer loads, labor, and disposal. Then connect the number to your site-prep budget, excavation, or base-material calculations as needed.

Sources and Methodology

This calculator estimates log weight from cubic-foot volume multiplied by species-based density. Straight logs are estimated as cylinders, while tapered logs can be estimated with a Smalian-style method based on end areas and length.

Important Disclaimer

This calculator provides estimates for planning purposes. For permitted structural work, foundations, multi-story construction, retaining walls over 4 feet, and commercial projects, calculations must be verified by a licensed structural engineer per IBC 2024 §1604. ConcreteCalculate.com is not liable for structural decisions made from these estimates.

Privacy Note

Calculations run in your browser and no signup is required. This tool is intended for field estimating and planning, and no project data is stored or transmitted through the calculator workflow.