Kadam Wood (Neolamarckia cadamba): Properties, Density & Uses

03.07.26 09:00 AM - By Cochin Wood Industries

In short: kadam (Neolamarckia cadamba) is a fast-growing, low-density hardwood from South and Southeast Asia, grown across India as a plantation and farm-forestry crop rather than logged from natural forest. It is light (published density runs 290–560 kg/m³ at 15% moisture), air-dries quickly with little degrade, and peels and nails easily — which makes it a workhorse for plywood core veneer, match splints and light packing cases. The trade-off: it is non-durable untreated, so it is meant for single-trip or treated packaging, not exposed outdoor service. It takes preservative and heat treatment very readily, and it is not an endangered species.

Kadam — data sheet
Botanical nameNeolamarckia cadamba
FamilyRubiaceae
Other nameskadamb, cadamba, laran, jabon, kelempayan
Origin / rangeS & SE Asia, India to N Australia
Tree sizeto ~45 m tall, 100–160 cm trunk
Density290–560 kg/m³ at 15% MC
Janka hardness~600 lbf (2,670 N)*
Texture / grainStraight grain, fine-to-medium texture
WorkabilityEasy; peels & nails well
SeasoningAir-dries rapidly, little degrade
DurabilityNon-durable (<1.5 yr ground contact)
TreatabilityVery easy (highly permeable)
Common usesPlywood core veneer, packing cases, match splints
Conservation statusLeast Concern (regional)
*Hardness is not well documented for this species in the forestry literature. The ~600 lbf figure comes from a single hobbyist chart and is indicative only — forestry references describe kadam qualitatively as soft to moderate, hardening from pith to bark. Treat all mechanical values as typical, not guaranteed. See references.

What kadam is, and where it grows

Kadam is a large, fast-growing tropical hardwood in the coffee family (Rubiaceae). Its accepted botanical name is Neolamarckia cadamba, but in the timber trade you will meet it far more often under older synonyms — Anthocephalus cadamba, Anthocephalus chinensis, Nauclea cadamba (the earliest name, from 1824) and Sarcocephalus cadamba all describe the same tree.12 Across India it is simply kadam or kadamb in Hindi, kadamba in Sanskrit, kadam in Bengali, kadambu or vellai kadambu — "white kadam" — in Tamil, and kadambu in Malayalam.1 In Southeast Asia the same wood trades as jabon in Indonesia, kelempayan in Malaysia, and laran.3

The tree is native across South and Southeast Asia — the Indian subcontinent, southern China, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia and Malaysia, reaching as far as northern Australia.12 It grows fast and large, to about 45 metres tall on a trunk 100–160 cm across.1 What matters commercially is that in India kadam is essentially a farm crop: it is raised on short-rotation plantations and agroforestry plots rather than cut from natural forest.56 Rotations are pegged to the end use — roughly 3–5 years (sometimes 7–8) for pulp and paper, about 4 years for matchwood, 8–10 years for plywood and veneer, and 10–15 years where larger sawn timber is wanted.26 Seed-raised plantations in Tamil Nadu have returned about 70–100 tonnes per hectare on a 6–7-year rotation, planted near 3–4 m in the row and 4–5 m between rows.6 Kadam is a recognised fast-growing plantation species in Kerala's humid Western Ghats belt too, though we have not seen a Kerala-specific yield figure and treat these as general Indian plantation data.

Density and hardness

Kadam is a genuinely light hardwood. The reference range quoted consistently by Wikipedia, the ITTO timber database and Useful Tropical Plants is 290–560 kg/m³ at 15% moisture content.123 That is a wide spread because it runs from very juvenile wood to older, denser stock; plantation-age timber tends to sit in the middle. Measured studies bear this out — a 13-year-old jabon returned a specific gravity around 0.48 (about 480 kg/m³), while a 54-month progeny trial spanned 0.33–0.50 (roughly 330–500 kg/m³).4 In practice, expect plantation kadam around 350–500 kg/m³ air-dry, with the full published envelope 290–560.

Bending strength follows from that low density. Air-dry Malaysian juvenile wood tested at a modulus of rupture near 44.6 N/mm² and a stiffness (modulus of elasticity) of about 5,291 N/mm² — around 5.3 GPa — rising to roughly 50.9 N/mm² oven-dry.4 The wood is rated strength class III in the Malaysian light-hardwood system, and several provenance studies conclude plainly that kadam is best used as a non-structural raw material — veneer, composites and packaging — rather than as a load-bearing member.4 For a plywood panel that is not really a limitation: stiffness comes from the cross-bonded construction, not from any single core veneer.

Hardness is where the honest answer is "not well documented." Forestry references describe kadam only qualitatively — soft to moderate, with hardness increasing from the pith outward to the bark.34 A single hobbyist hardness chart lists a Janka side hardness around 600 lbf (about 2,670 N), which is plausible for a light hardwood — roughly poplar territory — but it is not from a forestry or standards source, so we flag it as indicative only, not a figure to design to.

Working and seasoning

Kadam works easily with both hand and machine tools. It cuts cleanly, gives a very good, smooth surface, planes good-to-fair and moulds easily.25 For packing work the two properties that count most are that it is easy to nail and that its straight grain and fine-to-medium texture keep it from splitting at nail and staple lines.23 It also peels well: kadam rotary-peels readily at a knife angle near 92°, giving sound veneer about 1.5 mm thick that is suited to grade-IV commercial plywood and tea-chest plywood, as well as to match boxes and splints.3

It seasons kindly. Kadam air-dries rapidly with little or no degrade — an advantage where you want quick turnaround from plantation to mill.23 Movement is low; one study reports radial shrinkage around 3.05%.4 Fast, clean drying and low shrinkage are exactly what a veneer or packaging timber needs, because they keep panels and cases flat and dimensionally settled.

Durability and treatment

The one property to be candid about is durability. Kadam is non-durable, effectively perishable in exposed use: its heartwood is not differentiated from the sapwood, and Indonesian graveyard tests give an average service life under 1.5 years in ground contact.23 Untreated, it is also open to insect and fungal attack. This is a timber for single-trip or short-life packaging, or for interior and treated applications — not for exposed, wet or long-service outdoor use.

The flip side is that kadam takes treatment as well as almost any timber. It is highly permeable and very easy to preserve, whether by simple open-tank soaking or by pressure-vacuum plants, and it can even be impregnated with synthetic resins to lift its density and compressive strength.23 That permeability is a real advantage where treated packaging is specified or where ISPM-15 heat treatment is required for export crating — the wood accepts both readily.

Sustainability and sourcing

Kadam is not a threatened species. It is not flagged on the major global at-risk lists, and the regional Plants Red List of Bangladesh assesses it Least Concern.7 We have not found a separate global IUCN assessment, so we treat "Least Concern" as a regional rating and describe the species, accurately, as common and very widely planted rather than formally globally assessed. What can be said with confidence is that the kadam entering the Indian trade is overwhelmingly plantation- and farm-grown on short rotations, not cut from natural forest.56 For a buyer weighing the environmental footprint of packaging timber, that is a genuine point in its favour: choosing kadam supports plantation forestry rather than natural-forest extraction.

What kadam is used for

In the Indian trade kadam is a staple, low-cost plantation hardwood, and its uses line up closely with what a packing and plywood manufacturer needs. It goes into plywood core and face veneer, light construction, pulp and paper, packing cases, boxes and crates, match splints and match boxes, pencil slats, toys, flooring, carving and furniture components.235 Its combination of light weight, easy nailing, clean peeling and quick drying is why it earns its place specifically in plywood core veneer, the match industry and light packaging.35

How Cochin Wood uses kadam

We are a Kerala-based plywood and timber manufacturer, and kadam reaches us the way most Indian mills meet it — as a plantation hardwood that turns up in packing timber and as core veneer, not as a premium show-face. Where it fits, it does two jobs well. As core veneer it peels cleanly, dries fast and stays flat, which is exactly what a commercial-plywood or blockboard core wants — see our commercial plywood and blockboard and flush doors. As light, easy-to-nail packing timber it suits single-trip plywood boxes and crates and plywood pallets, and it appears in our sawn timber supply where a light, workable, treatable species is called for. Because kadam is non-durable untreated, we specify preservative or heat treatment wherever the packaging has to last or travel wet — the wood takes it readily. Tell us the grade, thickness and destination and we will match the right species to the job; browse the full product range or ask us directly.

Every figure on this page is drawn from the published sources listed below and cross-checked between them; where they disagree — as they do on density and hardness — we give the range rather than pick one number. The writing is our own. Mechanical properties are natural-timber averages that vary with provenance, age and moisture; they describe the species, not a guaranteed value for any given plywood panel or batch.

FAQ

Is kadam durable enough for export packing cases and pallets?

Kadam is non-durable — untreated, its life in ground contact is under about 1.5 years — so on its own it suits single-trip or short-life packaging rather than exposed or long-term outdoor use. For reusable crates, long storage or humid transit it should be preservative-treated, and kadam takes treatment very readily by open-tank or pressure-vacuum. It also heat-treats easily for ISPM-15 export compliance.

How well does kadam nail and hold together for crates?

Well for the purpose: it is easy to nail, cuts cleanly and has straight grain with a fine-to-medium texture, so it resists splitting at nail and staple lines. Because it is a soft, light hardwood, fastener holding is moderate rather than high — use an appropriate nail or staple density for the load.

Why is kadam used for plywood core veneer?

It rotary-peels readily — good veneer around 1.5 mm at a knife angle near 92° — dries fast with little degrade, moves very little, and has a smooth, uniform, pale surface. That makes it well suited to cores in commercial and tea-chest grade plywood; panel stiffness comes from the plywood construction, which offsets the timber's modest solid-wood strength.

Is kadam a sustainable choice?

Yes. Indian kadam is almost entirely plantation- and farm-grown on short rotations — roughly four years for matchwood, eight to ten for plywood — it grows fast, and it is not an endangered species (regionally Least Concern). Buying kadam supports plantation forestry rather than natural-forest extraction.

References

Sources consulted and cross-checked for this entry. Figures were compared between them; the text is Cochin Wood Industries' own.

  1. Wikipedia — Neolamarckia cadamba. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neolamarckia_cadamba (family, synonyms, vernacular names, native range, tree size, density, uses).
  2. Useful Tropical Plants — Neolamarckia cadamba. tropical.theferns.info (density, grain/texture, workability, non-durability, treatability, fast air-drying, felling age).
  3. ITTO Tropical Timbers Database — Kadam (Anthocephalus chinensis). tropicaltimber.info (veneer peeling at 92°/1.5 mm, grade-IV & tea-chest plywood, match splints, workability, durability).
  4. Zalifah Mahmud S. et al. — Physical and mechanical properties of juvenile wood from Neolamarckia cadamba planted in West Malaysia, Maderas: Ciencia y Tecnología (2017). scielo.cl (MOR ~44.6 MPa, MOE ~5,291 MPa, strength class III, radial shrinkage ~3.05%).
  5. A Potential Fast Growing Tree for Agroforestry and Carbon Sequestration in India: Anthocephalus cadamba, American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry (2014). sciencepublishinggroup.com (India farm-forestry status, fast growth, commercial uses).
  6. Neolamarckia cadamba — A Potential Tree Species for Domestication through Agroforestry System, ND Publisher. ndpublisher.in (rotation periods, Tamil Nadu 70–100 t/ha yield, spacing).
  7. Plants Red List of Bangladesh — Neolamarckia cadamba (assessed Least Concern). sufal.bforest.gov.bd (regional conservation status).

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