Hardtwood
Home Journal Wood Guide
Wood Guide

Teak vs. Iroko: The Honest Comparison

July 13, 2026 · By Kevin Reinhardt
Teak vs. Iroko: The Honest Comparison

Ask any boatbuilder what wood survives weather and you'll get one word: teak. Ask what they actually use when the budget is real, and you'll often get another: Iroko. We stock Iroko and source true teak by custom order, so this comparison comes from milling both — not from a supplier's brochure.

Where teak earns its legend

Teak's silica and oil content make it nearly indifferent to water, rot, and insects — it's the wood of ship decks for a reason. It machines predictably, moves very little, and weathers to the famous even silver. The catch is entirely economic: old-growth plantation teak is one of the most expensive commercial hardwoods on earth, and prices climb every year.

Where Iroko closes the gap

Iroko — West African, sometimes literally sold as “African teak” — shares the traits that matter outdoors: high natural oil content, strong decay resistance, and calm movement through wet-dry cycles. It's actually harder than teak (1,260 vs ~1,070 lbf Janka), weathers to the same even silver-grey patina untreated, and holds its golden-brown under an exterior oil regimen. Decades of European exterior joinery, garden furniture, and boat trim are the track record.

The differences that are real

  • Grain: teak is straighter and more uniform; Iroko carries a gently interlocked grain with more color variation board to board — some buyers prefer the life in it.
  • Feel: teak's oiliness gives it a distinctive waxy hand; Iroko is drier to the touch.
  • Price: the headline. Iroko delivers most of teak's outdoor performance at a fraction of the board cost — which is exactly why it's the outdoor species we keep in stock.

Our recommendation

For patio dining tables, outdoor kitchens, and restaurant terraces, Iroko is the rational spec — the performance gap is small and the price gap is not. Choose teak when the project demands the name or must match existing teak pieces; request a quote and we'll source it. Otherwise, price your Iroko top and read the full outdoor wood guide for how we build for exposure.

Ready to build? Price your piece in the Builder, explore our wood species, or see our transparent pricing.

More From the Journal

Ordering Tables for a Restaurant Opening: A Working Timeline
Work back from opening night: when to order restaurant table tops, how to count from a floor plan, grain-matched runs, direct-to-site delive…
Wood Countertop Care: The Whole Routine (It's Short)
How to care for a solid wood countertop with a modern hardwax-oil finish: the daily wipe, what to keep off it, water rules, and how repairs …
Restaurant Table Top Sizes: The Working Cheat Sheet
Standard restaurant table top sizes that actually work in service: two-tops, four-tops, rounds, banquettes, communal tables, and bar tops — …
Made in Farmingdale, NY
Made to order
100% zero-VOC finishes
Responsibly sourced hardwood
Lead time 5–6 weeks