Balsa wood is classified as a hard wood!
Balsa Wood Is Technically a Hardwood (Despite Being Super Soft)
Here's a brain-bender: balsa wood—the ultralight material used in model airplanes and rafts—is officially classified as a hardwood. Yes, the same stuff you can dent with your fingernail sits in the same category as oak, mahogany, and teak.
This isn't a mistake or a quirk of the lumber industry. It's because "hardwood" and "softwood" don't actually describe how hard the wood is. They describe what type of tree it comes from.
It's All About the Leaves (and Flowers)
In botanical terms, hardwoods come from angiosperms—flowering trees with broad leaves that drop seasonally. Think maple, cherry, and yes, balsa (Ochroma pyramidale). These trees produce seeds enclosed in some kind of fruit or pod.
Softwoods, on the other hand, come from gymnosperms—typically evergreen conifers with needles or scales. Pine, spruce, cedar, and fir are all softwoods. They produce seeds in cones, with no protective fruit.
So balsa gets classified as hardwood simply because it has broad leaves, produces flowers, and grows seeds in pods. It's a member of the mallow family (Malvaceae), related to hibiscus and cotton plants.
The Softest "Hardwood" on Record
If you tested balsa wood with the Janka hardness test—the standard measurement for wood hardness—it would score somewhere between 22 and 167 pounds-force (lbf). For context, that's absurdly low. Most softwoods score in the 300-500 range. Oak comes in around 1,300 lbf.
Balsa is so soft you can slice it with a butter knife. It's lighter than cork. A cubic foot weighs as little as 4-9 pounds, compared to 40+ pounds for most hardwoods. Its cellular structure is mostly air—about 90% in some cases—which is why it's so buoyant and easy to carve.
When "Hardwood" Means Hard (and When It Doesn't)
The classification system makes more sense when you realize plenty of "softwoods" are actually quite hard. Yew wood, a softwood, is denser and harder than many hardwoods. Longleaf pine is harder than cherry.
The terms are botanical shortcuts, not performance specs. Here's what actually matters:
- Hardwoods tend to grow slower, have more complex cell structures, and are often (but not always) denser and harder
- Softwoods usually grow faster, have simpler grain patterns, and are often (but not always) lighter and easier to work
- Balsa grows extremely fast—up to 10 feet per year—which is why its wood is so light and airy
Why Balsa Is Perfect for What It Does
That extreme lightness makes balsa ideal for applications where weight matters more than strength. Model builders love it because it's easy to cut and shape. It's used in surfboards, life rafts, and buoys for its buoyancy. During WWII, it was even used in the de Havilland Mosquito aircraft and life rafts.
The wood's structure—hollow cells with thin walls—also makes it a decent insulator. Some eco-friendly construction materials use balsa cores in composite panels.
So yes, balsa is classified as hardwood. It just happens to be the worst hardwood if your goal is actual hardness. But for lightness? It's unbeatable.