Frequently Asked Questions
What is the timber market like in Mississippi?
According to the Mississippi Forestry Commission, the state is one of the top pine timber producers in the country, with millions of planted pine trees in the central and southern counties. The market is very strong because there are plenty of mills ready to buy wood to make paper and lumber. Massive corporate timber companies like Weyerhaeuser own a ton of land here, which keeps the land prices very stable. Recently, huge plants have opened up to buy small pine trees, crush them into wood pellets and ship them overseas for fuel. Buying a pine tree farm here usually gives you a solid 5 to 7 percent return on your money every year. The biggest rule is to buy land close to a mill because loggers charge a fortune to haul wood more than 30 or 40 miles.
What does Mississippi timberland cost per acre?
Based on 2025 rural real estate data, planted pine tree farms in the productive southern counties sell for 1200 to 2500 dollars per acre, depending on how old the trees are and how good the land roads are. If you just want bare land that is ready to be planted with baby pine trees, you will pay 700 to 1200 dollars per acre. Natural woods with a mix of pine and hardwood trees up in the hills go for 1000 to 1800 dollars per acre. If the land sits right next to active mills in places like Hattiesburg, Laurel or Meridian, it will cost a bit more because it is so easy to sell the wood. Overall, Mississippi has some of the cheapest timber land in the entire South.
What timber management practices generate the best returns in Mississippi?
Running a profitable pine tree farm in Mississippi is a step-by-step process. You plant about 400 to 500 baby pine trees per acre and spray chemicals to kill the weeds. You thin the trees out for the first time around 12 to 15 years to sell the small wood to paper mills. You thin them again around 18 to 22 years and then cut the whole forest down around 25 to 35 years to sell the big expensive logs. According to the 2025 reports from the Mississippi State University Extension, if you have sandy land, you can also rake the pine needles and sell them to landscapers for 30 to 50 dollars per acre every year. If you also lease the land to hunters for an extra 6 to 12 dollars per acre, you can make a fantastic yearly income while the trees grow.
