Mobile Menu

Business Environment Profiles - New Zealand

Domestic price of timber

Published: 10 September 2025

Key Metrics

Domestic price of timber

Total (2026)

134 $

Annualized Growth 2021-26

1.0 %

Definition of Domestic price of timber

This report analyses the domestic price of timber. Data for this report is sourced from the Ministry for Primary Industries (Manatu Ahu Matua) and represents a weighted average price for all grades of timber. Prices are measured in nominal New Zealand dollars and presented in financial years.

Analyze the wider world in which businesses operate

We measure the upstream and downstream ramifications on thousands of industries so businesses can monitor their external operating environment. Explore membership options today.

Purchase options

Included in an IBISWorld Membership

Our industry reports include 35+ pages of data, analysis and charts, including:

  • Industry Financial Ratios
    Industry Financial Ratios
  • Historical and Forecast Growth
    Historical and Forecast Growth
  • Industry Market Size
    Industry Market Size
  • Industry Major Players
    Industry Major Players
  • Profitability Analysis
    Profitability Analysis
  • SWOT Analysis
    SWOT Analysis
  • Industry Trends
    Industry Trends
  • Industry Operating Conditions
    Industry Operating Conditions

IBISWorld Premium Data

You need a Membership for access
to this data.

  • Access to your choice of 632
    industry reports
  • Access to full library of 185
    Business Environment Profiles

Get Started with an IBISWorld Membership today!

PURCHASE OPTIONS CONTACT US NOW
IBISWorld
Premium Data

You need a Membership for
access to this data.

Get Started with an IBISWorld Membership today!
PURCHASE OPTIONS

Recent Trends – Domestic price of timber

IBISWorld expects the domestic price of timber to rise by 1.7% in 2025-26, to $134.5. The increase reflects a modest recovery in demand from timber wholesalers and sawmills as residential construction activity begins to stabilise following earlier declines in dwelling consents. Harvested wood volumes remain relatively high, but balanced export demand and firm pulp prices are expected to support a small uplift in domestic pricing. A weaker New Zealand dollar has also contributed to higher local prices by boosting the competitiveness of exports and raising the cost of imported substitutes.

Over the past five years, timber prices have been shaped by volatility in both global and domestic markets. The world price of wood pulp has swung sharply, with China's demand for New Zealand radiata pine providing intermittent support for local exporters. Radiata pine accounts for about 90% of New Zealand's harvested forests, according to the Ministry for Primary Industries, and remains sought after for its consistency and quality. A weaker New Zealand dollar has also bolstered export competitiveness, making imported timber relatively more expensive in the local market. With more than 55% of harvested wood exported, strong offshore demand has often placed a floor under domestic pricing, even as local demand fluctuated.

Domestic conditions have been mixed. Demand from forestry and logging, along with timber wholesaling, has been constrained by cyclical swings in construction activity since the COVID-19 pandemic. A surge in dwelling consents during 2021–22 temporarily boosted domestic demand, but weaker property market conditions and rising interest rates have since dampened building activity. Population growth and elevated property prices have supported underlying long-term demand, but in the short term, these factors have not been enough to prevent a pullback in prices. Overall, IBISWorld estimates the domestic price of timber will increase at a compound annual rate of 1.0% over the five years through 2025-26.

Show more

5-Year Outlook – Domestic price of timber

IBISWorld forecasts the domestic price of timber to rise 0.4% in 2026-27, to $135.0. The world pr...

Looking for IBISWorld Industry Reports?

Gain strategic insight and analysis on thousands of industries.

Trusted by More Than 10,000 Clients Around the World

  • IBISWorld client - VISA
  • IBISWorld client - ADP
  • IBISWorld client - Deloitte
  • IBISWorld client - AMEX
  • IBISWorld client - Bank of Montreal