What this guide covers
Buying timber well is a skill. This guide gives a simple checklist so you can pick boards that will stay stable, machine cleanly, and fit the job.
The 3 questions to answer before you buy
- What environment will this live in?
- Indoors heated
- Indoors but damp
- Outdoors above ground
- Outdoors ground contact
- What matters most for this project?
- Strength
- Stability
- Durability
- Appearance
- What process will you use?
- Hand tools, power tools, or both
- Will it be planed down heavily?
- Will it be glued up?
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If you do nothing else: buy timber that is dry enough for the final environment, graded appropriately, and treated only when needed.
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Step 1: Choose the right type of timber supply
- Construction timber (CLS, studs, carcassing): cheap, often fast-grown, usually strength graded, often wetter or less stable.
- Joinery timber: selected for straighter grain and fewer defects. More predictable.
- Hardwood boards: wider range of species and figure, often sold by thickness (e.g. 1", 2") and by volume.
- Sheet goods: stable and efficient for panels. Not "timber" but often the better material choice.
Step 2: Moisture content (MC) — the non-negotiable
You are not buying a board. You are buying a board at a moisture content.
Quick targets (typical)
- Heated interiors: ~6–10% MC
- Unheated interiors / sheds: ~10–14% MC
- Outdoor work: varies widely, but the key is that it should be stable for its use class and detailed correctly.
What to ask / check
- Was it kiln dried or air dried?
- What MC is it leaving the yard at?
- Has it been stored inside or under cover?
What to do if it is too wet
- Do not build immediately.
- Bring it into the workshop.
- Sticker and weigh it down.
- Let it acclimate until it is near the shop EMC.
Step 3: Grading and what the stamp actually means
Strength grading (e.g. C16, C24) tells you structural capacity, not beauty.
If it is stamped
- Read the stamp for:
- Grade (e.g. C24)
- Species group
- Standard / mill
- Sometimes treatment and use class
If it is not stamped
You are relying on:
- The supplier’s selection
- Your own defect checks
Step 4: Dimensions — nominal vs finished sizes
Many softwood products are sold by nominal size but arrive smaller when planed.
Checklist:
- Confirm the finished size (actual thickness × width).
- If you need a final thickness, buy with enough margin for flattening.
Step 5: Defect checks (fast yard inspection)
Pick boards like you are trying to predict the future.
Look down the length:
- Bow
- Crook
- Twist
Check the ends:
- End checks and splits
- Growth ring orientation (helps predict cupping)
Inspect faces/edges:
- Knots (size, type, and position)
- Wane (missing arris)
- Resin pockets
- Shake
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A few small knots can be fine. A big knot near an edge in a narrow piece is often a failure point.
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Step 6: Treatment and durability (buying for outdoors)
- Prefer design and detailing first.
- Treat when exposure demands it.
Checklist:
- Identify use class for the job.
- Confirm treatment type and penetration.
- Avoid mixing treated and untreated in ways that trap moisture.
Step 7: Storage and acclimation after purchase
- Sticker it.
- Keep it off concrete.
- Keep airflow around the stack.
- Let it acclimate before final milling.
Simple buying checklist (copy/paste)
- Intended environment is clear (indoor / outdoor / ground contact)
- MC is appropriate for that environment
- Grade is suitable (strength vs joinery selection)
- Dimensions confirmed (nominal vs finished)
- Boards inspected for warp, checks, knots, and wane
- Treatment only if needed, and correct for the use class
- Plan for storage and acclimation at home
🔗 Knowledge Network
Glossary Terms
- Moisture content (MC)
- Equilibrium moisture content (EMC)
- Kiln dried (KD)
- Air dried (AD)
- Green timber
- Strength grading
- Nominal size
- Finished size
- Wane
- Checks and splits
- Warp (bow, crook, cup, twist)
- Use class / hazard class
- Penetration
- Retention
Related Timber Species
- Spruce (typical structural softwood)
- Pine (softwood joinery and construction)
- Douglas fir (stronger structural softwood)
- Larch (often used outdoors)
- Oak (common hardwood benchmark)
Calculators
- None for this guide
Related Guides
- Track 4 – Guide 5 – Moisture Meters and Measuring MC
- Track 4 – Guide 6 – Storage, Acclimation, and Handling Timber
- Track 4 – Guide 7 – Timber Grading (Strength, Defects, and Stamps)
- Track 4 – Guide 8 – Planed vs Rough Sawn (Nominal vs Finished Sizes)
- Track 4 – Guide 9 – Timber Treatment & Protection (Use Classes, UC Ratings, and When to Treat)