Walnut is rarely the cheapest option. It isn’t supposed to be.
If you've been comparing dining tables and wondering why walnut often costs more than oak, veneer, or mass-produced alternatives, the answer usually comes down to three things: the material itself, the way it's built, and what kind of piece you're actually bringing into your home.
A dining table is one of the most used pieces of furniture most people own. It sees daily meals, homework, conversations, holidays, and years of ordinary life. It makes sense to understand what you're paying for before you choose one.
Walnut has been valued in furniture making for generations, and for good reason.
It offers a rich natural tone, expressive grain, and a depth that tends to feel warm rather than flashy. It can suit modern interiors, traditional homes, and spaces that sit somewhere in between.
There’s also a visual calmness to walnut. It usually doesn’t need stain or heavy treatment to look complete. The material often speaks for itself.
That combination of beauty, versatility, and demand means walnut typically commands a higher price than more common species.
If you're still comparing options, our guide to types of wood for furniture may help.
Not every walnut board becomes a dining table.
When building a large tabletop, makers look for boards with the right stability, grain character, width, and structural integrity. Pieces that are straight, dry, visually balanced, and suitable for joinery are more valuable than lower-grade stock.
That matters even more on larger dining tables where the surface becomes the focal point of the room.
The best tables usually start with better material selection long before any cutting or finishing begins.
This is where many price comparisons become misleading.
A solid walnut table and a walnut-look veneer table may appear similar in a photo, but they are not the same thing.
Solid wood offers:
Veneer has its place, especially for lower budgets or temporary spaces, but it should not be confused with a solid hardwood build.
If you're exploring heirloom-quality options, see our walnut dining tables built to order.
Some materials look best on day one and gradually decline.
Walnut tends to do the opposite.
With use and time, solid walnut often develops more character, warmth, and softness. Minor marks can become part of the story rather than a reason to replace the piece.
And because it is real wood, maintenance and refinishing remain possible years later.
That long horizon changes the value equation.
Price matters. So does context.
A less expensive table may be the right decision for some homes. But replacing a table every few years because it loosens, chips, warps, or no longer suits the space can become expensive in its own way.
A well-made solid wood table often costs more upfront, but can serve for decades.
Sometimes the more useful question is not “What costs less today?” but “What will still feel right ten years from now?”
Walnut can be an excellent choice if:
For many buyers, the dining table becomes the emotional centre of the home. In that context, material quality matters.
It’s also worth being honest about when walnut may not be the best fit.
You may prefer another route if:
Good furniture decisions depend on priorities, not prestige.
Wood species is only part of the picture.
Joinery, proportions, finish quality, edge treatment, and base design all shape how a table looks and performs over time.
A thoughtfully built oak table can outperform a poorly made walnut one.
That’s why we always encourage buyers to look beyond species alone.
If you're considering custom work, our custom furniture commission process explains how we approach sizing, materials, and design.
Walnut dining tables cost more because the material is valuable, the better stock is selective, and the best builds require time and care.
For some homes, that extra investment won’t make sense.
For others, it becomes one of the few pieces used every day that still feels right years later.
If you're exploring a custom walnut table, dimensions, craftsmanship, and overall design matter just as much as the species itself.
You can view our current walnut dining tables with metal bases here.