The Firewood Directory

Firewood Bundles

Pillar guide · 5 min read

Stacked retail firewood bundles wrapped in plastic netting, kiln-dried for indoor and campfire use
Retail bundles — typically 0.75 cubic feet of kiln-dried wood

A standard firewood bundle contains about 0.75 cubic feet of kiln-dried wood — 5-7 splits, ~20 pounds — and costs $6-$10 at most retailers. Convenient for occasional use but dramatically more expensive per cubic foot than buying by the cord.

Bundle vs cord economics

UnitCubic feetTypical price$/cubic foot
Retail bundle (Home Depot, gas station)0.75$7$9.33
Campground bundle0.75$10-$15$13-$20
Half cord (delivered)64$225$3.50
Full cord (delivered)128$400$3.13

Bundles cost 3-6x as much per cubic foot. Convenience comes at a real premium.

When bundles make sense

When to skip bundles

Common bundle brands

Most retail bundles are distributed regionally rather than nationally. Common labels include Cutting Edge Firewood, Bear Mountain (USDA), Western Premium Firewood, Pinnacle, and dozens of regional brands. Quality is similar across reputable brands — all use kiln-dried hardwood under USDA pest-treatment standards.

Common questions

How much wood is in a firewood bundle?

A standard firewood bundle contains 0.75 cubic feet of kiln-dried wood — roughly 5-7 small splits totaling about 20 pounds. Some premium bundles are 1.0 cubic feet; 'small' bundles can be 0.5.

How long does a firewood bundle burn?

A typical 0.75 cubic foot bundle of kiln-dried hardwood burns about 2-3 hours in a campfire or fire pit, or 90-120 minutes in an indoor fireplace at higher airflow. Hardwood bundles burn 50-100% longer than softwood (pine/fir) bundles.

How much does a firewood bundle cost?

A bundle typically costs $6-$10 at hardware stores, gas stations, and grocery stores. Campground bundles sold by the host often run $10-$15. By cubic foot, bundles are dramatically more expensive than buying by the cord — roughly $13-$20 per cubic foot vs $2-$4 by the cord.

Are firewood bundles worth it?

For occasional use — one fire a year, camping, a hostess gift — yes. For regular burning, no. The convenience premium is 3-10x the per-cubic-foot price of a cord. Heavy users always buy by the cord or half cord.

Where can I buy firewood bundles near me?

Bundles are widely available at Home Depot, Lowe's, Walmart, Ace Hardware, supermarkets, gas stations, campground hosts, and many convenience stores. Most regions also have local kiln-dried bundle producers that supply these retailers.

Buying in bulk instead?

Find local suppliers offering full cord, half cord, and delivery.

Find suppliers near you →