Janka Hardness Chart

Compare woodworking species by Janka hardness rating side by side.

Species Type Janka (lbf) Hardness Relative hardness Typical uses
Balsa Hardwood 100 Very soft
Lightest commercial wood; model making, insulation cores
Western Red Cedar Softwood 350 Very soft
Outdoor decking, siding, shingles
Eastern White Pine Softwood 380 Very soft
Interior trim, furniture, cabinets
Douglas Fir Softwood 660 Soft
Structural framing, plywood face veneer
American Black Cherry Hardwood 950 Medium
Fine furniture, cabinetry, turning
Black Walnut Hardwood 1,010 Medium
Furniture, gunstocks, turning
Teak Exotic 1,070 Medium
Outdoor furniture, boat decking
Yellow Pine (Longleaf) Softwood 1,225 Medium
Flooring, heavy construction
Yellow Birch Hardwood 1,260 Medium
Cabinetry, furniture, plywood
Red Oak Hardwood 1,290 Medium
Flooring, cabinetry, furniture
White Ash Hardwood 1,320 Hard
Tool handles, sports equipment, flooring
White Oak Hardwood 1,360 Hard
Flooring, cooperage, outdoor furniture
Hard Maple Hardwood 1,450 Hard
Flooring, cutting boards, instruments
Hickory Hardwood 1,820 Very hard
Tool handles, flooring, smoking wood
Pecan Hardwood 1,820 Very hard
Flooring, furniture
Osage Orange Hardwood 2,040 Very hard
Bow making, fence posts, turning
Purple Heart Exotic 2,520 Very hard
Decorative accents, flooring, turning
Brazilian Cherry (Jatoba) Exotic 2,690 Very hard
Flooring, cabinetry
Ipe Exotic 3,510 Very hard
Outdoor decking, heavy construction
Cumaru (Brazilian Teak) Exotic 3,540 Very hard
Decking, flooring, heavy construction

About Janka hardness

The Janka test (ASTM D143) measures the force required to embed a 0.444″ (11.28 mm) steel ball to half its diameter into the wood surface. Higher values indicate harder, more dent-resistant wood.

Janka hardness is a useful guide for flooring and tabletop choices, but keep in mind it measures resistance to indentation only — not tensile strength, stiffness, or workability. A very hard wood can still be brittle or prone to tear-out.

Very soft <500 Soft 500–900 Medium 900–1 300 Hard 1 300–1 800 Very hard >1 800