Standing around a crackling campfire is one of camping's greatest pleasures. But nothing kills the mood faster than running out of firewood at 9 PM when everyone's settled in for s'mores and stories. After 15+ years of camping trips where I've both overpacked wasted wood and, yes, made emergency late-night wood runs, I've learned that calculating firewood needs is part science, part art.
For a typical camping trip, plan on 3-5 bundles of firewood per night for a moderate-sized campfire with 2-4 people. This assumes a 3-4 hour evening fire. Weekend campers (2 nights) should bring 6-10 bundles, while week-long trips require 20-35 bundles depending on usage patterns.
Quick Answer: The average camper needs 3-5 bundles per night. Adjust up for cold weather, cooking, or large groups.
- 1 Night: 3-5 bundles
- Weekend (2 nights): 6-10 bundles
- Week (5-7 nights): 15-35 bundles
Quick Firewood Calculator
Use this reference table to estimate your firewood needs. I've built this from tracking my own consumption across dozens of trips and factoring in what experienced campers consistently report.
Quick Summary: This calculator assumes standard evening campfires (3-4 hours). Add 50-100% more if cooking meals over the fire, or 200-300% more for winter camping when fire becomes your primary heat source.
| Trip Duration | Solo (1 person) | Small Group (2-4) | Large Group (5-8) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Night | 2-3 bundles | 3-5 bundles | 5-8 bundles |
| Weekend (2 nights) | 4-6 bundles | 6-10 bundles | 10-16 bundles |
| Long Weekend (3 nights) | 6-9 bundles | 9-15 bundles | 15-24 bundles |
| Full Week (5-7 nights) | 10-15 bundles | 15-25 bundles | 25-40 bundles |
Adjustment Multipliers
The table above assumes standard conditions. Apply these multipliers based on your specific situation:
| Scenario | Multiplier | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Cooking dinner over fire | x2 | Cooking requires consistent heat and more fuel |
| Cold weather (below 50F) | x2 | Fire becomes essential for warmth |
| Winter camping (below 32F) | x3-4 | Extended burn times for survival heat |
| Kids love stirring the fire | x1.5 | Children constantly add wood "to help" |
| Windy conditions | x1.5 | Wind increases burn rate significantly |
| Dutch oven cooking | x3 | Requires massive coal bed maintenance |
What Factors Affect Firewood Consumption
Is weather the biggest factor in firewood consumption?
Yes, weather dramatically affects firewood consumption. Cold temperatures can double or triple your needs, while wind increases burn rate by 50% or more. Rain introduces the challenge of keeping wood dry and starting wet fires.
- Best For: Shoulder season camping when weather is unpredictable
- Limit: Even in summer, always bring 20% extra as buffer
Weather is the single biggest variable I've encountered. On a mild 60-degree evening, my family of four might burn through 3-4 bundles over a relaxed evening. But that same group in 40-degree weather? We're easily burning 8-10 bundles because the fire transitions from "nice to have" to "essential for comfort."
I learned this the hard way on a spring camping trip in the Smokies. The forecast called for lows in the 50s, but a cold front dropped temperatures to 38 degrees with a steady breeze. The six bundles I thought would last two nights disappeared in one evening. We spent the next day driving to find more wood because nobody wanted to repeat that freezing night.
Group Size Impact
More people doesn't just mean longer fires—it means different fire dynamics. Large groups tend to have people drifting in and out, requiring the fire to be maintained for longer periods. Plus, someone's always "just going to add one more log."
With solo camping, I've made a small fire last 4 hours on 2-3 pieces of wood by carefully managing the coals. But put 6-8 people around that same fire, and someone's constantly adding wood whether it needs it or not. For scout troops or family reunions, plan on 2-3 times your baseline calculation.
Fire Purpose: Ambiance vs. Utility
Not all campfires serve the same purpose. A small ambiance fire for ghost stories consumes far less wood than a cooking fire. When I'm just hanging out, I can maintain a pleasant fire with 2-3 logs per hour. But throw a Dutch oven in the mix for chili, and I'm burning through 8-10 pieces of wood just to build and maintain the coal bed.
Coal Bed: The layer of glowing hot embers that develops at the base of a well-established fire. This is what provides consistent heat for cooking and is what you're building when adding wood before dinner preparation.
Firewood Needs by Trip Duration
Overnight Trips (1 Night)
For a single night, 3-5 bundles covers most scenarios. This assumes an evening fire lasting 3-4 hours plus perhaps a small morning fire if you're cooking breakfast. I've done overnight trips with as little as 2 bundles when camping solo and being stingy with wood, but 4 gives you a comfortable buffer.
The risk with underpacking for overnight trips is low—you're leaving the next day anyway. But nothing's worse than that final hour wanting one more s'more but being out of fuel. My rule: one extra bundle is cheaper than the regret of an early bedtime.
Weekend Trips (2-3 Nights)
Weekend camping is where most people get their firewood calculations wrong. The baseline is 6-10 bundles for two nights, but I've watched countless groups arrive with 4-6 bundles and end up scavenging for fallen wood (where legal) or making gas station runs on Saturday.
Here's what typically happens on a weekend trip: Friday night fire burns 3-4 bundles. Saturday might involve both a morning cooking fire AND a long evening session, easily consuming 6-8 bundles alone. That's potentially 12 bundles before you even get to Sunday morning. I recommend 10-12 bundles for a comfortable weekend.
Week-Long Trips (5-7 Nights)
Extended camping requires serious planning. For a full week, I plan 15-25 bundles for my family of four, assuming we're not relying on the fire for every meal. That might sound like a lot until you break it down: 3-4 bundles per night x 6 nights = 18-24 bundles. It adds up fast.
The challenge with week-long trips isn't just quantity—it's storage. Where do you put 20 bundles of wood? I've seen creative solutions ranging from stacking under the trailer to building a dedicated wood crib. More importantly, you need to keep it dry through potentially multiple rain events.
One strategy I've learned: buy half your wood at home and plan to purchase the rest locally mid-trip. It reduces transportation issues and guarantees you won't run completely out before the end.
Firewood Types and Burn Time
What firewood burns the longest for camping?
Hardwoods like oak, hickory, and maple burn 2-3 times longer than softwoods. A single oak log can provide 2-3 hours of steady heat, while pine might last 45 minutes. The difference matters significantly for multi-day trips.
- Best Overall: Oak (longest burn, excellent coals)
- Best for Cooking: Hickory (hottest, consistent coals)
- Avoid: Pine (burns fast, pops sparks)
The type of wood you burn dramatically affects how much you need. I once bought what turned out to be softwood bundles at a campground—probably pine or poplar—and burned through 8 bundles in a single evening. The same fire with quality oak would have used maybe 3-4 bundles.
| Wood Type | Burn Time | Heat Output | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oak | 2-3 hours | High | All-night fires, heating |
| Hickory | 2-2.5 hours | Very High | Cooking, Dutch ovens |
| Maple | 1.5-2 hours | High | Balanced performance |
| Ash | 1.5-2 hours | Medium-High | Easy to split, reliable |
| Pine | 30-45 min | Medium | Kindling only |
| Cedar | 45-60 min | Medium | Kindling, aroma |
Seasoned Firewood: Wood that has been dried for at least 6-12 months to reduce moisture content below 20%. Green (unseasoned) wood contains 50%+ moisture, smokes heavily, and provides significantly less heat. Properly seasoned firewood is lighter, makes a hollow sound when two pieces are knocked together, and has cracks in the end grain.
The quality of campground firewood is notoriously inconsistent. I've purchased bundles that were clearly green—cut recently and never properly dried. You can identify green wood by its heavy weight, damp smell, and sizzling sound when burning. This stuff is frustrating because it consumes 2-3 times the volume of seasoned wood for the same heat output.
When buying wood, I knock two pieces together. A sharp crack indicates properly seasoned wood. A dull thud means it's still green. If the campground wood seems questionable, consider bringing your own from a reputable source (subject to transport restrictions).
Transporting and Storing Firewood
Understanding Firewood Measurements
Firewood measurements confuse everyone, and sellers sometimes take advantage. A "bundle" can range from a few sticks to a proper armload. Here's what you need to know:
| Measurement | Approximate Size | Bundle Equivalent |
|---|---|---|
| Bundle | 0.75-1.5 cubic ft | 1 (varies widely) |
| Face Cord / Rick | 42-48 cubic ft | 40-50 bundles |
| Full Cord | 128 cubic ft (4x4x8) | 120-150 bundles |
| Pickup Truck | 60-90 cubic ft | 60-90 bundles |
Cord of Firewood: The standard unit for measuring firewood volume. A full cord is a stack of wood 4 feet high, 4 feet wide, and 8 feet long (128 cubic feet). A face cord (also called a rick) is a single stack 4 feet high and 8 feet long, but only as deep as the logs are cut (typically 16-18 inches).
Transportation Tips
Transporting firewood creates a mess. I've spent too many trips cleaning bark and dirt out of my SUV after the wood shifted during transit. Here's what works:
- Use a dedicated container: A plastic storage bin or heavy-duty canvas firewood carrier contains the mess and makes unloading easier.
- Elevate the wood: Place a tarp or cardboard under your wood pile to protect your vehicle's interior from dirt and moisture.
- Secure the load: Loose firewood becomes a projectile in sudden stops. Use ratchet straps or bungee cords to secure bundles.
- Cover it: Even dry firewood can absorb moisture during transport. A simple tarp prevents this issue.
Campsite Storage
Once you arrive, proper storage prevents your wood from becoming unusable. I learned this during a trip where we stacked our wood directly on the ground. Overnight dew and ground moisture turned the bottom layer into damp logs that refused to burn properly the next morning.
Always elevate your wood off the ground. Use the campfire ring grate, lay down logs as a base, or bring a small portable firewood rack. Cover the pile with a tarp, but leave the sides partially open for airflow. Fully wrapping wood in plastic traps moisture and promotes mold.
Arrange your wood by size and type. Keep kindling and small pieces easily accessible for fire-starting. Group larger logs by size so you can grab what you need without rummaging through the entire pile in the dark.
Firewood Regulations and Safety
Can you bring firewood from home to a campsite?
It depends on your location and destination. Many states restrict transporting firewood across county or state lines due to invasive pests like the emerald ash borer. Violations can result in fines ranging from $500 to $5,000.
- Best Practice: Buy firewood within 50 miles of your destination
- Check Local: Always verify regulations before transporting wood
Firewood transport regulations exist for good reason. Invasive insects like the emerald ash borer and spotted lanternfly can hitchhike in firewood, devastating forests hundreds of miles from their origin. Moving firewood is one of the primary ways these pests spread.
Before transporting firewood, check both your origin and destination regulations. Many states have quarantine zones where transporting firewood is illegal. When in doubt, buy local. It's often cheaper anyway once you factor in the fuel cost of hauling heavy wood hundreds of miles.
Fire Safety and Bans
Drought conditions and wildfire risks mean fire bans are increasingly common. Always check current conditions before your trip. Many areas use a tiered system:
- Stage 1: No campfires except in developed campgrounds with metal fire rings
- Stage 2: No campfires at all—charcoal and gas stoves only
- Stage 3: No open flames of any kind
Even when fires are permitted, follow these safety practices: clear a 10-foot radius around your fire ring, never leave a fire unattended, and drown your fire completely before leaving or sleeping. If it's too hot to touch with your bare hand, it's not out.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much firewood do I need for 3 days of camping?
For a 3-day camping trip, plan for 9-15 bundles (3-5 per night). This assumes a standard evening campfire with 2-4 people. Increase to 15-20 bundles if cooking meals over the fire, or 20-30 bundles for cold weather camping below 50 degrees.
How much firewood fits in a pickup truck?
A standard pickup truck bed can hold approximately 1/2 to 2/3 cord of firewood when stacked properly, equivalent to 60-90 bundles. This is enough for 20-30 nights of casual camping or 10-15 nights with daily cooking fires. Always secure the load with a tarp and straps.
How many logs do you need for a campfire?
A small ambiance fire requires 3-4 logs and burns for 2-3 hours. A moderate evening fire needs 5-7 logs for 3-4 hours of burn time. Large cooking fires consume 8-12 logs per hour. The type of wood matters—hardwoods burn 2-3 times longer than softwoods.
How long does a cord of wood last for camping?
A full cord of firewood (128 cubic feet) can last 25-40 nights of casual camping with evening fires only. With daily cooking fires, expect 15-20 nights. For winter camping where fire provides essential heat, a cord might last only 8-12 nights due to extended burn times.
Should I bring my own firewood or buy it?
Buying at campgrounds is convenient but expensive ($6-10 per bundle). Bringing your own costs $3-5 per bundle but check transport restrictions first due to invasive species laws. The best approach is often buying from a local supplier near your destination—you save money while avoiding legal issues.
Can you bring firewood to a campsite?
It depends on location. Many areas restrict transported firewood due to invasive pests like the emerald ash borer. Some states prohibit moving firewood across county lines, while others have complete transport bans. Always check local regulations and consider buying wood within 50 miles of your campsite.
How much does a bundle of campfire wood cost?
Campfire wood bundles typically cost $6-10 at campgrounds (convenient but pricey), $4-7 at gas stations near camping areas, and $3-5 when purchased in bulk from local suppliers. A face cord (40-50 bundles) usually costs $80-150 depending on wood type and region.
What is the best firewood for camping?
Oak offers the longest burn time (2-3 hours per log) and excellent coals for all-night fires. Hickory burns the hottest and is ideal for campfire cooking. Maple provides a good balance of burn time and availability. Ash burns well even when slightly green and splits easily. Avoid pine for main fuel—it burns fast and pops dangerous sparks.
The Final Firewood Verdict
After calculating firewood needs for countless trips, here is the quick breakdown for your next adventure:
- General Rule: 3-5 bundles per night for 2-4 people - Adjust based on weather and cooking plans.
- Buffer Strategy: Always bring 20-30% extra - Running out is worse than having leftovers.
- Wood Quality Matters: Buy seasoned hardwood - Green softwood burns 3x faster.
- Cold Weather Multiplier: Plan 2-3x more wood below 50F - Fire becomes essential heat, not optional ambiance.
Pro Tip: Check firewood transport regulations before your trip. Many states restrict moving wood across county or state lines due to invasive pests. Buy within 50 miles of your destination when possible.
