Make short work of your firewood with our pick of the best splitting axes and mauls
Axes are all pretty much the same, right? Wrong. Different activities require different types of axe – and if you’re looking for one to efficiently split your firewood, you’ll need a splitting axe. This is sometimes also called a maul.
Read on below for more information on how to pick the right axe for you, and the difference between a splitting axe and a chopping axe.
Looking for log splitters? Take a look at our guide to the best manual and electronic devices to prepare winter firewood.
What size axe for splitting wood?
Splitting axes and mauls come in a range of sizes, too – from small, single-handed hatchet-sized options to long-handled models intended to be swung with both hands. The size you’ll pick will depend on the size and toughness of your wood. It may well be a wise idea to buy both a single- and double-handed option.
Here’s how to choose a splitting axe
Read on for our pick of the best splitting axes and our favourite splitting wedges. These cover a range of sizes and prices. For more information on splitting wood, head to our article on how to chop kindling page. And you’ll want to make sure you’ve got something to store your wood, so take a look at our list of the best contemporary log holders.
The best splitting axes and mauls 2024
Davaon Log Splitting Axe
Key features
- Weight: 0.95kg
- Length: 46cm
- Material: carbon steel, fibreglass
Splitting axes need to withstand a fair bit of abuse, especially in the way they often need to be wrenched out of half-split logs.
Every log splitting axe on this list has been picked with durability in mind, but if you’re looking for a smaller axe that’s extra-likely to serve you faithfully over many years, this model by Davaon is a smart choice. It’s 46cm long, and its head is made of high-grade carbon steel.
It also comes equipped with a protective sheath for the head and blade so you can keep it in top condition when it’s not in use.
Bulldog 6lb Log Splitting Maul
Buy from Mano Mano (£24.01)
Key features
- Weight: 6kg
- Length: 91.5cm
- Material: fibreglass
Bulldog stocks a wide range of sensibly-priced, no-nonsense garden equipment, and the brand’s splitting maul looks like a smart option for larger logs that need a full, double-handed swing. Its grippy, soft-touch handle looks like it offers ease of use too.
Fiskars X11 Splitting Axe
Key features
- Weight: 1.08kg
- Length: 44cm
- Material: steel, FiberComp™
Finnish company Fiskars has been making and selling chopping tools since the seventeenth century, so we’re highly confident in the quality and reliability of its splitting axes. You’re certainly spoiled for choice: there are five different sizes in its range. But we’ve picked out the X11 as a solid, single-handed option for smaller logs and kindling. It measures 44cm in length, and comes with a plastic blade guard for when it’s not in use.
Jackson Log Splitting Maul and Splitter
Key features
- Weight: 2kg
- Length: 90cm
- Material: steel, hickory
Spear & Jackson’s splitting maul comes in four different sizes. We’ve picked out the 4.5lb (2kg) maul as a smaller double-handed alternative to the Bulldog and Hultafors, but there is a larger 6.5lb (2.9kg) size, too. Best of all, this maul comes with a splitting wedge, something you’re highly likely to need at some point.
Husqvarna Splitting Axe S2800
Buy from Husqvarna (£107.99)
Key features
- Weight: 2.9kg
- Length: 70cm
- Material: fibre-reinforced PA
Husqvarna is a company from – yes, you guessed it – Scandinavia. And yes, it was founded in the seventeenth century. The S2800 is a heavy-duty splitting axe that’s intended for use with particularly large logs. Its steel, resin-coated axehead weighs 2.3kg – but with an overall weight of 2.9kg, this heavy-duty axe isn’t all that heavy.
Roughneck Grenade Splitting Wedge
Key features
- Weight: 1.65kg
- Length: 17.8cm
- Material: steel
If you’ve got some particularly tough wood to split, and your axe simply doesn’t have the requisite brute force, then bring in this little guy. With the flat end of your axe, you can knock this ‘log grenade’ into the wood – then a heavy blow should split it apart. We particularly like this splitting wedge from Roughneck as its four toothed ridges will split the log not into two but four pieces.
Forest Master Swedish Log Splitter
Key features
- Weight: 11.4kg
- Length: 98cm
- Material: metal, plastic
We couldn’t leave this incredibly clever-looking contraption off the list. It’s one that looks especially suitable for people who are less physically able to split wood, or have vast amounts to get to that could quickly become difficult to manage.
You can fix it in place by using the drill bit that comes included to create a hole into your base log. Then you’ll just need to begin throwing the weighted blade down into your wood for an effective end result, making this the ultimate labour-saving log-splitter.
Niwaki Ono Splitting Axe
Buy from Niwaki (£139.00)
Key features
- Weight: 1.5kg
- Length: Not specified
- Material: carbon steel, white oak
An ono is a Japanese splitting tool that’s larger than a hatchet, but light than a standard Western axe. It’s ideally suited for smaller logs, its lightness offering you plenty of swing.
We’re simply enamoured by the elegant design on display, from the subtle curve of the white oak handle to the darken carbon-steel head. A lovely addition to anyone’s tool rack.
Hultafors HY Splitting Axe
Buy from Hultafors
Key features
- Weight: 1.5kg
- Length: 75cm
- Material: steel, hickory
Another Scandinavian brand (this time Swedish); another that’s been making tools since the seventeenth century. In contrast to Fiskars’ X range, Hultafors’ HY axe is wooden-handled and traditional looking. If you appreciate the aesthetics as much as efficiency in your tools, you can’t go wrong with this – we love everything from the finish on the hickory handle to the delicately inscribed logo on the axehead.
With a reliable and well-crafted splitting axe, you can streamline your wood splitting tasks and save time and effort.
What’s the difference between a splitting axe and a chopping axe?
While felling axes are designed to cut against the grain of wood – to chop it, essentially – splitting axes are intended to cut in parallel with the grains. Quite literally, you’re splitting them apart. Their axeheads are typically heavier than those of felling axes, since they’re intended to come down on their target with force. The vast majority also have a flat, hammer-like side: this is for you to drive a splitting wedge into your wood. These are also known as ‘log bombs’ or ‘log grenades’.
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