Timber Harvesting Equipment
Dealers and operators of feller-bunchers, skidders, and logging machinery.
Market snapshot
These figures describe Timber & Logging Operations (7.3.6), the segment that Timber Harvesting Equipment sits within — not Timber Harvesting Equipment on its own.
Logging (NAICS 113310) is covered by the USDA census rather than the Economic Census (establishments reported but not receipts), so the segment is not separately sized here; timberland is increasingly REIT/TIMO-owned.
Business model & economics
Revenue model
Log sales, timber harvest, and land/carbon value
Key economics
- Recurring revenue
- Moderate
- EBITDA margin
- Harvest-margin- and land-value-driven
- Capex intensity
- High
recurring harvest plus land appreciation
Characteristics
- Harvesting timber and managing timberland.
- Timberland an institutional REIT/TIMO asset class.
- Emerging carbon-credit and conservation revenue.
Geographic concentration
Logging operations concentrate where commercial forests are densest — Maine, Mississippi, West Virginia, and Oregon — spanning the Northeast, Southern pine belt, and Pacific Northwest.
U.S. Census Bureau — 2022 County Business Patterns (establishments by state), NAICS 113310. Concentration shown by location quotient.
M&A deal context
Who’s acquiring
- Timberland REITs & TIMOs
- Institutional & conservation investors
- Logging & forest-services consolidators
What’s driving deals
- Timberland consolidation as an asset class.
- Carbon-credit and conservation monetization.
- Harvest cash flow and land appreciation.
Find Timber Harvesting Equipment acquisition targets
Search Acquisera’s index for companies classified under Timber Harvesting Equipment (7.3.6.3) and build a targeted deal pipeline.
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