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How much does plywood cost in the Philippines in 2026?
A standard 4×8 sheet runs roughly ₱350–450 for 1/4-inch ordinary, ₱650–800 for 1/2-inch, and ₱1,000–1,200 for 3/4-inch. Marine board sits higher, about ₱450–1,400 depending on thickness, and phenolic film-faced formwork board runs ₱900–1,300+ each. Treat these as indicative ranges and confirm a live quote, since price moves with retailer, region, and date.
What is the difference between ordinary and marine plywood price?
Marine plywood typically costs 20–40% more than ordinary plywood of the same thickness. The gap pays for a denser, more moisture-tolerant panel and a better bond. The local "marine" label is looser than the strict BS 1088 standard, so ask what the panel actually meets before paying the premium.
How much is a 4x8 marine plywood in the Philippines?
Indicatively, ₱450–600 for 1/4-inch, ₱800–950 for 1/2-inch, and ₱1,200–1,400 for 3/4-inch, with thicker or premium panels reaching higher. Confirm a current quote, as marine pricing varies widely by grade and supplier.
Is it cheaper to import plywood directly for a project?
For project volumes, yes. A 40-foot high-cube container holds roughly 600 sheets of 18 mm plywood, and container-direct import from a Vietnamese mill typically lands 25–35% below Philippine retail for an equivalent grade. The trade-off is a 30–45 day lead time and the capital to commit a full container, so it suits builders and traders moving volume rather than small buyers.
How can I tell phenolic plywood from ordinary at the store?
Check the cut edge. A dark, continuous glue line points to a phenolic (Class 3) bond; a light or whitish line points to melamine or urea. Weight that matches the thickness and a smooth, well-sanded face also signal a fuller, higher-grade core.