Understand hardwood (NHLA) and softwood grading systems and which grade to buy for your project.
Hardwood lumber in North America is graded by the National Hardwood Lumber Association (NHLA). Grades are based on the percentage of a board that can yield clear, defect-free cuttings — not on the overall appearance of the board.
| Grade | Min width | Min length | Clear face | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FAS Firsts & Seconds | 6″+ | 8′+ | 83⅓% | Fine furniture, long clear runs, mouldings |
| FAS 1-Face F1F / Selects | 4″+ | 6′+ | 83⅓% | Cabinet face frames, mouldings, one clear face needed |
| Select Sel | 4″+ | 6′+ | 83⅓% | Flooring, interior trim, cabinets |
| No. 1 Common #1C | 3″+ | 4′+ | 66⅔% | Short furniture parts, flooring, raised panels |
| No. 2 Common #2C | 3″+ | 4′+ | 50% | Rustic furniture, knotty panelling, shorts |
| No. 3A Common #3AC | 3″+ | 4′+ | 33⅓% | Pallets, packaging, economy projects |
Lumber is sold by the board foot. "Clear face" refers to the percentage of the board surface that must be free of defects. The back face may have more defects at the FAS and Select grades.
Softwood dimensional lumber (2×4, 2×6, etc.) is graded primarily for structural strength under the Western Wood Products Association (WWPA) and Southern Pine Inspection Bureau (SPIB) systems.
| Grade | Primary use | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Select Structural | High-load structural framing | Strictest grain and defect limits |
| No. 1 | General structural framing | Good strength, limited knots |
| No. 2 | General framing, most common | Wider knots allowed; standard stud grade |
| No. 3 | Light framing, blocking | More knots and defects; not for load-bearing without engineering |
| Stud | Wall studs only | Optimised for vertical loads; 8′ or 9′ lengths |
| Construction | Light framing | Similar to No. 2 for 2–4″ width lumber |
| Standard | Light framing, furring | Below Construction; economy grade |
| Utility | Blocking, crating, formwork | Lowest structural grade |
| C & Better Select | Appearance mouldings, trim | Virtually free of defects; highest appearance grade |
| D Select | Interior trim, panelling | Very few defects; one face may have minor blemishes |
Always inspect boards at the lumber yard when possible. Two boards of the same grade can differ significantly in character — NHLA grade guarantees a minimum yield, not appearance.