Logs and Firewood Abingdon

Firewood Abingdon

Free delivery to Abingdon
and surrounding areas.

  • Kiln-dried logs
  • Free delivery
  • Free stacking service
  • Local team delivering to Abingdon

Firewood Abingdon

Free delivery to Abingdon and surrounding areas.

  • Kiln-dried logs
  • Free delivery
  • Free stacking service
  • Local team delivering to Abingdon

At Nene Valley Firewood, we supply top-quality kiln-dried logs with free delivery and stacking across Abingdon and surrounding villages. Whether you’re in town or tucked away in the Oxfordshire 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 Abingdon

Kiln Dried Hardwood Logs by the Square Metre

Top-quality firewood logs with a long burn and great heat efficiency.

Kiln Dried Hardwood Logs by the Square Metre

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 in nets

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 Abingdon

We also offer free delivery to all of the local areas around Abingdon including Shippon, Radley, Sunningwell, Cothill, Gozzard’s Ford, Drayton, Clifton Hampden and Bayworth. Whether you live near Radley Lakes, along the Oxford Road, or in a countryside village, we’ll bring your logs right to your door.

Why choose us for your logs in Abingdon?

FAQs

Delivery times depend on our time of year but are typically 2-4 working days unless specified elsewhere, we also offer a next day delivery service. We will always give you a call or text to arrange a date and time as we want to make sure it is convenient for you.

Logs need to be dried before they are burnt; if they aren’t, the extra moisture must be dried off by the fire, wasting precious heat energy. Additionally, wet firewood releases harmful toxins that can build up in your appliance increasing the risk of a fire. These toxins also escape into the atmosphere and are detrimental to environmental and human health. Kiln-dried logs are far more efficient, burning hotter and longer while producing less smoke. Ours are guaranteed below 18% moisture and carry the Woodsure ‘Ready to Burn’ certification – ideal for homes with log burners or open fireplaces.

We are delighted to be certified by the Woodsure ‘Ready to Burn’ scheme. They are the only certification scheme in the UK that rigorously checks that wood fuel producers produce and supply wood fuel to the correct standard. Not only do their rigorous standards contribute to the reduction of air pollution, they also act to protect your appliance from unnecessary damage. To learn more about this worthwhile scheme, visit https://woodsure.co.uk/.

This depends on the size of your burner. Our standard size is 10 inch, but we offer a range of sizes from small to large in length, as well as chunky or skinny logs so you have five sizes to choose from. If unsure, check your stove manual or give our friendly team a call and we’ll help you choose the right size.

The vast majority of our wood comes from within the UK. Many of our logs are sourced from managed woodlands across Oxfordshire and other surrounding counties and dried on our local site. Your logs could have come from just a few miles outside of Abingdon! By sourcing and drying our logs locally, we reduce unnecessary transport and support responsible forestry, helping to preserve the local countryside.

Yes, Abingdon is not currently in a smoke control zone, so you can use a log burner or open fire. Just be sure to burn kiln-dried wood, like ours, which meets all the requirements for clean, efficient burning. It’s always a good idea to check Cherwell District Council’s website for updates.

Proudly Serving The Abingdon Community

You might’ve seen our delivery vans near Abbey Gardens & Abbey Meadows, Nag’s Head Island or on the A34. 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 Abingdon and we’ll add some free firelighters to your next order!

Fun Facts…. Abingdon’s Historic Connection to Wood and Fire

Fire risk in timber buildings and thatch

◦ Abingdon, like many medieval and early modern towns, had many timber-framed houses with thatched roofs, straw, furze, all of which are highly flammable.
◦ Because of this, one of the earliest laws (c.1599) included ordinances specifically aimed at preventing fire: inspecting houses, ensuring safe storage of straw/fuel in oasts and brewhouses, etc.

Fire-fighting equipment & communal responsibility

◦ Local authorities mandated that certain burgesses, town officials, keep leather buckets and long ladders, often of fir wood, ready in their homes in case of fire.
◦ Night watches between certain hours were enforced to spot and prevent fires.

Fuel & storage of combustible materials

◦ Straw, furze (a kind of gorse), fern etc, were stored in thatched houses and oasts and these storage practices led to commands to store them safely to reduce fire hazard.
◦ There were ricks (stacks) of hay and straw (fuel sources) which sometimes caught fire.
Fire legislation & building leases after the Great Fire of London
◦ Influenced by the Great Fire of London (1666), property leases in Abingdon often included covenants forbidding thatching, requiring stone chimneys and non-wooden flues to limit fire spread.

Firefighting infrastructure and services

◦ Town council ordered purchase of fire engines; by 1733 Abingdon had its first fire engine.
◦ Volunteer Fire Brigade formation in 1871; before that, informal community methods (bucket chains) were used.
◦ Fires are recorded destroying industrial premises those working with flax, hemp or commercial stock.

Woodland ownership and timber supply

◦ Bagley Wood is an ancient woodland historically owned by Abingdon Abbey (until 1538), after which much of it passed to St John’s College, Oxford. So woodlands were in the economic and landholdings structure of Abingdon.
◦ This suggests wood likely played an important role as a local resource, fuel and building materials.

Coal trade & firewood supply

◦ As technologies changed and coal became more common, coal merchants and firewood suppliers were significant in Abingdon’s history. For example, there were coal merchants who also supplied wood and solid fuel.
◦ Even into 20th century, coal and wood fuel businesses were part of the town’s economy.