📅This fact may be outdated
The 63,000 tree figure was cited in environmental literature from the 1990s-2000s when the NYT Sunday edition had much higher circulation (1.69 million copies). By 2023, Sunday circulation dropped to 677,000—a 60% decrease. Additionally, newsprint recycling rates improved from 35% (1989) to over 73% (2009), further reducing tree consumption. While the calculation methodology may have been accurate historically, the current environmental impact is significantly lower due to declining print circulation and improved recycling.
It takes about 63,000 trees to make the newsprint for the average Sunday edition of The New York Times.
The Staggering Paper Trail of Sunday's New York Times
Picture this: you grab your Sunday New York Times from the doorstep, settle into your favorite chair with coffee, and crack open that satisfying brick of newsprint. What you're holding represents a small forest.
At its peak in the 1990s and early 2000s, a single Sunday edition required approximately 63,000 trees. That's not a typo. Six. Three. Thousand. Trees. For one day's news that most people would toss in recycling by Monday.
The Math Behind the Madness
How does one newspaper consume an entire forest? The Sunday Times was legendary for its heft—often 500+ pages split across multiple sections: News, Business, Arts, Sports, the Magazine, Book Review, and those infamous ad inserts. At peak circulation in the mid-1990s, the paper printed nearly 1.7 million copies every Sunday.
Paper production is resource-intensive. Manufacturing newsprint requires:
- More water per ton than any other industrial product
- Massive energy consumption
- Release of air pollutants including sulfuric acid and carbon monoxide
Across all U.S. newspapers in 2009, newsprint consumption meant 95 million trees lost annually, 126 billion gallons of wastewater generated, and 73 billion pounds of greenhouse gases emitted. Sunday editions alone accounted for roughly 500,000 trees per week nationwide.
The Great Disappearing Act
Here's where the story gets interesting: that 63,000-tree Sunday edition is largely extinct. By 2023, the Times' Sunday circulation had plummeted to 677,000 copies—a 60% drop from its peak. By 2025, total print subscribers (weekday and Sunday combined) fell to just 580,000.
The environmental impact didn't just shrink—it collapsed. Fewer copies printed means fewer trees felled. But there's more good news.
Recycling rates skyrocketed. In 1989, only 35% of U.S. newspapers were recovered and recycled. By 2009, that figure reached 73%. Recycling a single run of the Sunday Times saved an estimated 75,000 trees—more than the original production consumed, thanks to recycled content offsetting virgin pulp.
What Newspapers Taught Us
The Times' transformation mirrors a broader shift. Print newspapers became an environmental case study in unsustainable consumption—and then in rapid industry transformation. The digital revolution didn't just change how we read news; it dramatically reduced the physical footprint of journalism.
Today's Sunday Times reader is more likely scrolling through a tablet than wrestling with sections sprawled across the kitchen table. The environmental cost? Negligible compared to the forest-consuming behemoth of decades past.
So next time you see a physical Sunday paper—increasingly rare in the wild—remember: you're looking at a piece of industrial history. What once demanded a forest now serves a shrinking audience of print loyalists, while millions more get their news without felling a single tree.