There is only one way to make firewood burn well: dry it out properly. That sounds obvious until you realise that most people who own a log store have built or bought one that works against that goal. A fully enclosed shed. A tarpaulin pulled tight over the whole pile. Wood stacked on soil. Each of these traps moisture instead of releasing it, and all the time you spent cutting or stacking does nothing to improve the burn.

A log store does two specific things at once: it keeps rain off the top while letting air move freely through the sides and underneath. Get both right and wood that arrives wet from the timber yard will be ready to burn in 12-24 months, depending on species. Get either one wrong and it can sit there for years and never dry properly. This guide covers building a standard 1 x 2 metre timber log store. It will last 15-20 years with minimal maintenance, it is sized right for most households, and it is designed to do the job it is actually supposed to do.

Why the design of your log store determines whether your wood seasons at all

Wood is hygroscopic, meaning it absorbs and releases moisture based on what surrounds it. Freshly cut timber contains 50-60% moisture by weight. Before it burns efficiently, that has to come down to 20% or below. In England, under the Wood Burning in Smoke Control Areas Regulations that came into force in May 2021, wood sold for burning in volumes under two cubic metres must meet a moisture content below 20%. If you are buying unseasoned wood and drying it yourself, keeping it at that level once it gets there is your responsibility.

The two enemies of seasoning are rain from above and damp from below. A good log store handles both. Open sides handle the rest. They let the wind do the work of carrying moisture away from the pile. A sealed building, whether that is a shed or a garage, traps the humidity that rises from drying wood. Unless the ventilation is exceptional, it makes things worse rather than better.

What a log store must do – and why
Raised base, minimum 10cm off the ground
Soil conducts moisture constantly upward into any wood that touches it. Even a 10cm gap breaks that contact and allows air to flow under the stack.
Sloped roof with front overhang
Rain must run off and away, not pool. The slope drains it. The overhang at the front shields the exposed face of the stack from wind-driven rain.
Slatted sides with gaps, open front
Air needs to pass through the pile, not just around it. Gaps of around 6-7cm between laths on the side walls let wind do the work. A fully enclosed box defeats the purpose entirely.
South or south-east facing
The UK’s prevailing wind comes from the west. An open-fronted store facing south gets maximum sun on the stack and is sheltered from rain driven by westerly weather. This alone can cut seasoning time significantly.

Planning permission and where to site it

A log store almost certainly falls under Permitted Development rights, which means no planning application needed. The rules that apply are the same as for any garden outbuilding: the structure must not be forward of the house’s principal elevation, the eaves height must not exceed 2.5 metres, and the total of all outbuildings must not cover more than 50% of the land surrounding the original house. If your store is within two metres of a boundary, the maximum height is 2.5 metres. For most straightforward log stores well under a metre in eaves height, none of this is remotely close to being triggered.

Listed buildings and properties in designated areas such as conservation areas and Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty may have Permitted Development rights restricted or removed. Check with your local planning authority before building if either applies to you.

For siting, choose somewhere you can easily get a barrow or a trolley from the store to your door. In winter, carrying armfuls of logs through a dark, wet garden further than you need to gets old quickly. Avoid placing the store directly against a wall or fence. Leave at least 10cm for airflow and to stop damp transferring between surfaces. If it must go against a wall, the roof slope should run toward the front so rain drains away from the structure rather than behind it.

What you’ll need

This build uses pressure-treated softwood throughout. Untreated timber will start showing rot within a few years in UK conditions. Pressure treatment forces preservatives deep into the wood’s cellular structure, giving it a realistic 20-year lifespan outdoors. When you cut treated timber, seal the cut ends with end-grain wood preservative before assembly, since the factory treatment only protects the outer surface.

Cordless combi drill
Pre-drilling holes prevents timber splitting when driving screws near edges
Cordless impact driver
Drives large volumes of screws into treated timber without wrist strain
Jigsaw or circular saw
Cutting laths and making notches in the floor boards where they meet the uprights
6 x pre-cast concrete decking blocks (with recess for 50mm beams)
Foundation blocks – set into ground to keep structure level and stable
Pressure-treated construction timber
100x50mm for base joists; 76x50mm for frame uprights and rails; 69x22mm laths for floor, walls and back
Corrugated metal or polycarbonate roofing sheet, approx 2200 x 1300mm
Plus roofing screws, washers and spacers to fix to the roof frame
Galvanised screws (4.5x50mm and 6x100mm), gravel, crushed stone chippings
Spirit level, tape measure, pencil, carpenter’s square, spade

The foundation – keeping the wood off the ground

Ground contact ruins firewood. Soil holds moisture at all times of year, and any wood resting on it absorbs it continuously. This is the most common reason log stores fail to dry wood properly. The base looks solid but the bottom layer is permanently damp, and the moisture wicks up from there.

Concrete decking blocks are the simplest and most effective foundation for this kind of build. They sit low in the ground and lift the entire structure clear of the soil. If your log store is going on an existing paved or concrete surface, you can skip steps 1 and 2 entirely and build straight off the paving.

Laying the foundation
1
Level and mark the area
Clear any weeds and level the ground where the store will sit. Use stakes and string to mark the perimeter accurately. Off-square at this stage means everything is harder from here on.
2
Dig and set the decking blocks
Dig six holes to a depth of 30cm plus the block height, positioned for the two outer joists and one central. Compact the base of each hole, fill with 20cm of gravel then 10cm of crushed stone chippings. Set the blocks so they protrude no more than 1cm above the surrounding ground. Check with a spirit level across all six – they must be in the same plane or the floor frame will rock.
3
Lay the base joists
Cut three 1-metre lengths from the 100x50mm timber and slot them into the recesses of the decking blocks. These are the joists that carry the floor frame and ultimately the weight of the logs. Check they are level along their length.

Building the frame, walls, and floor

The floor frame sits on top of the base joists. It must be square before you do anything else. A frame that is not square will show up in every part of the build that follows, and there is no way to correct it later without taking things apart.

Building the structure
4
Build the floor frame
From 76x50mm construction timber, cut two pieces at 1000mm and three at 1900mm. Assemble a rectangular frame with the long pieces running between the short ends – butt joints, pre-drilled and secured with 6x100mm screws. Check diagonals are equal before the screws fully tighten. Lay the completed frame onto the base joists and fix down.
5
Install the uprights
Cut two front uprights at 1350mm and two rear uprights at 1225mm from the 76x50mm timber. Both sets get an 8-degree angle cut at the top to match the roof pitch. The front sits 125mm taller than the rear – this 8-degree slope is what makes the roof work. Screw each upright to the inside corners of the floor frame, check for plumb with a spirit level.
6
Lay the floor boards
Cut 23 pieces of 69x22mm lath to 1-metre lengths. Screw them evenly across the floor frame, spaced to allow air movement underneath the stack. The two outer laths will need notches cut where they meet the uprights. This slatted floor is as important as the raised base – logs touching a solid, airless board cannot dry from the bottom.
7
Build and fit the side walls
For each side wall, cut eight 69x22mm laths to roughly 740mm – short enough to fit comfortably between the uprights. Space them approximately 6.5cm apart and fix to vertical 22x22mm square timber battens (1300mm at the front, 1200mm at the rear to follow the roof pitch). This gap between laths is what allows cross-ventilation through the stack. Attach the completed panels to the uprights.
8
Build and fit the back wall
Cut eight laths to 1780mm for the back wall, again spaced 6.5cm apart on 1200mm battens. Fit the panel to the back uprights. Add a 1225mm reinforcing centre upright of 69x22mm timber to stiffen the back wall – without it, the structure has too much flex for long-term use.

Tip: Pre-drill every screw hole before driving. Pressure-treated timber splits along the grain more readily than untreated wood, particularly near board ends. A 3mm pilot hole takes seconds and prevents a lot of frustration.

The roof – pitch, overhang, and material

The roof has one job: get rain away from the stack. That means a slope, and that slope has to run in the right direction. If your store is freestanding, the slope runs toward the front. Rain drains forward and away from the stack. If the store sits against a wall, the same rule applies: roof sloping toward the front, not back toward the wall behind.

Roof construction
9
Build the roof frame
From 76x50mm timber, cut: two pieces at 1900mm for the front and back rails, one at 900mm for a central cross-strut, two at 1000mm and two at 925mm for the side boards (adjusted to the 8-degree pitch angle). Attach the frame to the top of the uprights and secure the cross-struts.
10
Cut and fix the support braces, then attach the roof sheet
Cut two 400mm braces from 76x50mm timber and fit them at 45 degrees to the front uprights for structural support. Fix the corrugated sheet from above using roofing screws with washers and spacers to prevent the fixing points becoming leak points. The sheet should overhang the front by at least 50mm to shield the exposed face of the stack from driven rain.

Corrugated metal sheet is the standard choice for this kind of build. It is durable, lightweight, and needs no maintenance beyond clearing leaves off it in autumn. Corrugated polycarbonate works equally well and is marginally easier to cut. Avoid roofing felt on a structure like this. It deteriorates quickly and is difficult to replace without dismantling part of the roof frame.

Against a wall: Leave a minimum 10cm gap between the back of the store and the wall or fence. This gap is not optional. It prevents damp from the wall transferring into the wood, and it gives you the airflow the back of the stack needs.

Stacking and seasoning – the part most people get wrong

Building the store right is only half the job. How you fill it determines whether it actually works. The aim is to let air move through the pile, not just around it, which means loose stacking, not tight. Logs packed as efficiently as possible are the enemy of good seasoning. The gaps between an irregular, loosely stacked pile are exactly where the air needs to go.

Stacking and storing – do and don’t
Do
Don’t
Stack loosely so natural gaps form between logs – these are where the air moves
Pack logs in tightly to maximise what fits – this traps humidity inside the pile
Place bark side up where you can – bark is the wood’s natural weatherproofing
Toss green wood straight on top of seasoned wood – it will rehydrate what is already dry
Lay a few split logs across the open front first to stop the stack rolling forward as you load
Cover the sides with tarpaulin to keep rain off – this traps moisture that cannot escape
Use a moisture meter on freshly split interior surfaces to check readiness before burning
Stack above 1.5 metres if the store has no end supports – free-standing stacks collapse as you pull from the bottom

How long wood needs to season depends entirely on the species. Split wood seasons significantly faster than rounds, because more surface area is exposed. Smaller splits dry faster than large ones. If you are starting from green timber, cut to length and split before stacking rather than after. It makes a measurable difference to the timeline.

Oak
18-24 months
Dense hardwood – longest drying time in UK conditions
Ash
12-18 months
One of the faster-seasoning hardwoods
Beech
18-24 months
Similar to oak – dense, slow to give up moisture
Birch
9-12 months
Faster-seasoning than most hardwoods
Pine / softwood
6-12 months
Lower density means moisture releases faster
Kiln-dried
Ready immediately
All species dried to 10-15% in commercial kilns – but store correctly or it reabsorbs moisture

Ready to Burn: Wood bought with a Ready to Burn certification label has been tested below 20% moisture content, which is the legal threshold in England for wood sold in volumes under two cubic metres. Even certified wood reabsorbs moisture if you store it badly. A log store that does its job correctly keeps it there.

Amazon Log store essentials – UK picks

Concrete Decking Blocks (pack of 6)

★★★★★
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Corrugated Metal Roofing Sheet

★★★★★
View on Amazon

Digital Moisture Meter for Wood

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As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

How much wood do you actually need to store?

The size of your log store should match how you actually use your stove, not how large a structure you can fit against the fence. Building something too large for your needs means part of the store is always either empty or filled with wood that has been sitting there so long it starts losing its heating value. After about five years, logs begin to deteriorate. Building too small means running short in February, which is the most expensive time to buy.

Storage capacity by usage type
Usage
Budget
Mid
Premium
Occasional fires
1 m3
1.5 m3
2 m3
Regular evenings Oct-Apr
3 m3
4 m3
5 m3
Primary heating source
5 m3
6 m3
8+ m3
Seasoning own green wood
6 m3
7 m3
8+ m3
Budget = minimum comfortable; Mid = typical household; Premium = generous buffer. Seasoning own wood requires capacity for 2+ years of stock simultaneously.

The log store in this guide is 1 x 2 metres and holds approximately 1.5 to 2 cubic metres depending on how tightly you stack. That suits most households running a stove as supplementary heating on evenings and weekends. If you burn more than that, build wider or plan a second bay later. The foundation and frame design scales directly. Use the same method and just extend the dimensions.

One last thing worth knowing about storage size: make sure a delivery vehicle can get close enough to load the store directly. Carrying armfuls of logs from a pile in the drive to a store at the back of the garden is not a five-minute job when you are talking about a tonne of wood. Siting the store for practical access matters as much as siting it for the right aspect.

Amazon Log store essentials – UK picks

Concrete Decking Blocks (pack of 6)

★★★★★
View on Amazon

Corrugated Metal Roofing Sheet

★★★★★
View on Amazon

Digital Moisture Meter for Wood

★★★★★
View on Amazon

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.