Eucalyptus Timber Mats – 5-7 Year Lifespan

Why are Eucalyptus Mats So Expensive?

High quality raw material, best-of-breed manufacturing, plantation grown Eucalyptus timber, single species, #1 and better timbers, end plates, F1554 steel bolts, USDA phytosanitary treatment. This is not an expensive mat; it's the most affordable mat on the market.
High quality raw material, best-of-breed manufacturing, plantation grown Eucalyptus timber, single species, #1 and better timbers, end plates, F1554 steel bolts, USDA phytosanitary treatment. This is not an expensive mat; it's the most affordable mat on the market.

Date: May 13, 2026

Summary:

  • Eucalyptus mats look expensive if the only number you compare is purchase price.
  • That is the wrong number.
  • The right number is total cost of ownership: purchase price, freight, lifespan, replacement, failure risk, handling, and performance.

Once you run that math, WFG Eucalyptus mats start looking like the premium machine that finishes the job while the cheap machine waits for parts.

Think Caterpillar versus a generic import. The cheaper machine may move dirt on day one. The premium machine is built for uptime, reliability, resale, and cost per productive hour. Timber mats work the same way.

Premium Costs More Than Cheap. That Does Not Make It Expensive.

WFG’s crane mat guide compares an 18′ x 4′ x 12″ Eucalyptus mat at $1,200 with a 60-month lifespan against a mixed hardwood #2 mat at $975 with a 21-month lifespan. Monthly depreciation is $20.00 for Eucalyptus and $46.43 for mixed hardwood #2.

In other words, the higher-priced mat costs less per month of use.

That is the heart of the Eucalyptus value argument. If a buyer saves money on day one and then buys replacement mats sooner, the savings are delayed cost.

Nine Differences That Change the Real Price

Differentiator WFG Eucalyptus Mixed Hardwood
Warranty and guarantee 10-point manufacturer’s warranty No warranty terms
Raw material 100% plantation Eucalyptus, never mixed species Mixed hardwood is a marketing name, not a species designation
Grade of timbers #1 and better Usually #2, sometimes #3.
Occasionally #1 oak at premium price.
Manufacturing quality Dedicated precision manufacturing, square timbers, dimensional accuracy, uniform bolt placement, bar coding, and WFG branding Quality depends on supplier, sawmill output, species mix, grade, and defects
Defect policy No wane, square timbers, fresh timber, true-to-size, real 48” wide, real thickness Wane, bark, round timbers typical
Rot and weather resistance Rot resistant. Freeze tested in field and lab Rot common. Other resistance varies by species
Bolt standards ASTM F1554 Grade 36+ bolts in every mat Commodity carriage bolts
End treatment Metal end (truss) plates and end sealing No plates, usually painted not end sealed.
Truss or end plates Metal end plates for strength and integrity. Worldwide best practice for timbers construction None.
Some differences are visible when the Eucalyptus truck arrives: square edges, clean timbers, no wane, end plates, and consistent construction. Others show up later, when the mat is still working after cheap alternatives have been replaced.
 

Raw Material Is the Starting Point

The first reason Eucalyptus changes the economics is strength. Eucalyptus has 2,000 psi bending strength. Mixed Hardwood #1 is listed at 1,000 psi, but typical mats now use a mix of #2 and #3 timbers. Mixed Hardwood #2 has bending strength of 550 psi. 
 
That means the Eucalyptus mat has more structural capacity. A weaker mat pushed near its limit has less room for defects, rough handling, wet conditions, and repeated loading.
 
This is why “mixed hardwood” is not enough of a specification. It does not tell the buyer the species mix, grade, bending strength, defect limits, hardware, or manufacturing tolerances.

Manufacturing Quality Is Not a Detail

A timber mat is a structural product. Small manufacturing differences become field differences.
 
WFG’s manufacturing guarantee is specific: 100% plantation Eucalyptus, square timbers, metal end plates, USDA-approved phytosanitary treatment, fresh timber, phytosanitary treated to USDA requirements, end sealing, no wane, ASTM F1554 Grade 36+ bolts, dimensional accuracy, and custom notching where needed.
 
That is not the same as buying whatever mixed hardwood material is available. Dimension is not a specification. A 16′ x 4′ x 8″ mat can be strong, weak, consistent, defective, long-lived, or disposable.

Freight and Replacement Are Part of the Price

Eucalyptus also changes the freight equation. WFG Eucalyptus crane mats are stronger and lighter, with 25% more mats per truck after six months of moisture loss. More mats per truck means lower freight cost per mat every time the fleet moves.
 
Replacement cost matters even more. If a mixed hardwood mat must be replaced in 18 to 24 months while Eucalyptus stays in service for five to seven years, the cheap mat has to be bought again, moved again, and written off again.
 
The purchase order will not show that future cost. The jobsite will.
 

Cheap Mats Are Often Expensive in Disguise

The case for Eucalyptus is not that every project needs the heaviest or most expensive mat. The case is that buyers should match strength, quality, and lifespan to the real work.
 
For many contractors, crane companies, utilities, and procurement teams, the smart mat is the lower-total-cost-of-ownership mat. It lasts longer, moves more efficiently, and gives the buyer something cheap mats rarely provide…confidence.
 
If you are comparing Eucalyptus against mixed hardwood, do not stop at price per mat. Compare cost per month, documented strength, defects, hardware, end treatment, and what happens two, three, four and five years from now.
 
World Forest Group can help you run that comparison before you buy. Contact us for a project-specific quote and a total cost of ownership discussion.