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The Difference Between Hardwood and Softwood (It's Not What You Think)

The Difference Between Hardwood and Softwood (It's Not What You Think)

Hardwood and softwood are not measures of hardness. Balsa — one of the softest woods in the world — is a hardwood. Yew — dense enough for longbows — is a softwood. The distinction is botanical: how the tree reproduces and how its wood is structured. Understanding this clears up one of the most persistent misconceptions in wood specification.


Hardwoods: Angiosperms

Hardwoods come from angiosperms — flowering plants that produce seeds enclosed in fruit or nuts. Oaks, maples, walnuts, and cherries are hardwoods. So are balsa, poplar, and basswood. The name refers to the broad-leaved, deciduous (or tropical) trees in this group, not to the density of the wood.


Hardwood anatomy is complex: vessels (pores), fibers, and rays are arranged in varied patterns. Ring-porous species (oak, ash) have distinct earlywood pores; diffuse-porous species (maple, cherry) have uniform vessel distribution. This structure produces the grain patterns and figure that designers specify. For actual hardness, use Janka hardness — a physical test, not a botanical category.


Softwoods: Gymnosperms

Softwoods come from gymnosperms — conifers and related plants that produce naked seeds (cones). Pine, spruce, fir, cedar, and redwood are softwoods. So are yew and larch. Most softwoods have simpler anatomy: tracheids instead of vessels, no pores visible to the naked eye. The wood is often — but not always — less dense than hardwoods.


Yew (Taxus baccata) has a Janka of ~1,520 lbf — harder than many hardwoods. Longleaf Pine approaches 870 lbf. "Soft" is a misnomer for these species.


Why the Confusion Persists

In temperate regions, many commercial hardwoods (oak, maple, walnut) are denser than commercial softwoods (pine, spruce). The correlation holds for common species — but it breaks for balsa, basswood, and yew. Trade and industry use "hardwood" and "softwood" as botanical categories. When you need to know how hard a wood actually is, check Janka values in the Library.


Practical Takeaway

Specify by species and properties, not by the hardwood/softwood label. For flooring, cabinetry, or furniture: Janka hardness, dimensional stability, and grain figure matter. For structural lumber: softwoods (Douglas Fir, Southern Yellow Pine) dominate. For fine woodworking: both hardwoods and softwoods have their place. See the full hardness ranking for context.