Firewood Leighton Buzzard
Firewood Leighton Buzzard
Free delivery to Leighton Buzzard
and surrounding areas.
- Kiln-dried logs
- Free delivery
- Free stacking service
- Local team delivering to Leighton Buzzard


Firewood Leighton Buzzard
Free delivery to Leighton Buzzard and surrounding areas.
- Kiln-dried logs
- Free delivery
- Free stacking service
- Local team delivering to Leighton Buzzard

At Nene Valley Firewood, we supply top-quality kiln-dried logs with free delivery and stacking across Leighton Buzzard and surrounding villages. Whether you’re in town or tucked away in the Bedfordshire countryside, our local team delivers straight to your door. Fast, friendly, and five-star rated. Keep your home warm with sustainably sourced wood, dried and ready to burn.
Best Selling Logs And Firewood In Leighton Buzzard
Kiln Dried Hardwood Logs – Bulk Bag
£145 Incl. VAT
Top-quality firewood logs with a long burn and great heat efficiency.
Kiln Dried Hardwood Logs 1, 2 or 3 loose m³
£210/M3 Incl. VAT (WITH FREE STACKING)
Buy Kiln-dried hardwood logs by the cubic metre for economy and value. Logs will be stacked for free in an outside location.
Kiln Dried Hardwood Logs 12, 30 or 60 nets
£110 – £450 Incl. VAT
Choose from 12, 30 or 60 nets for economy firewood. Always below 18% moisture content.
Free Firewood Delivery Beyond Leighton Buzzard
We also offer free delivery to all of the local areas around Leighton Buzzard including Clipstone, Billington, Grove, Soulbury, Stoke Hammond, Bragenham and Tilsworth. Whether you live near Leighton Buzzard Railway, along the Road, or in a countryside village, we’ll bring your logs right to your door.

Why choose us for your logs in Leighton Buzzard

You might’ve seen our delivery vans near Rushmere Country Park, Leighton Buzzard Market, or on the A4146. Whether you’re in a Victorian terrace near the town centre or a rural farmhouse on the outskirts, we’re here to keep your firewood topped up all year round.
Send us a picture of one of our vans in Leighton Buzzard and we’ll add some free firelighters to your next order!
Fun Facts…. Leighton Buzzard’s Historic Connection to Wood and Fire

Name & landscape
The “Leighton” part of Leighton Buzzard comes from Old English Lēah-tūn, meaning a “farm in a clearing in the woods.” So right from its name, wood is part of its origin. There were woods in the area historically: Baker’s Wood, King’s Woods, which formed part of the nearby landscape tied to local development.
Timber trade & building
Timber was one of the goods traded in Leighton Buzzard along with iron, lime, brick and corn. The availability of wood and local woodland resources fed into construction, carpentry, and local economy. Old buildings in town show timber-framing and carpenters’ marks. A good example is 17 Hockliffe Street, thought to be a building from c. 1550-1600, or possibly earlier, that has visible carpenters’ marks, whole trees used in the structure, and original wattle & daub in the roof.
The Great Fire of Leighton Buzzard (1645)
A significant fire occurred on 7 March 1645, damaging many buildings and property in Leighton Buzzard. The scale was substantial, losses were calculated in pounds large for the time. This was during the English Civil War era. Buildings built before that fire, like the one at 17 Hockliffe Street, are valued partly because they survived that fire.
All Saints Church fire, 1985
The Church of All Saints, a medieval church, dating from 1277 though some parts older, was badly damaged in a fire in 1985 just as a restoration was nearly complete. The chancel roof was destroyed, the nave roof heavily damaged, the tower, spire, vestry were damaged, the bells and organs were lost. A new restoration was started almost immediately; many historic features were repaired or replaced.



