Yes — wooden medals are a sustainable alternative to metal awards for many fun runs, school events, and community races. Wood is renewable, needs less energy to produce than cast metal, and can be composted or recycled at end of life when unpainted. Trade-offs: no enamel fill or gold/silver/bronze plating, and natural grain means each medal looks slightly different. At Badges and Medals, wooden medals use FSC- or PEFC-certified and recycled timber, with laser etching, UV printing, and custom laser-cut shapes available.
Use this guide to decide if wooden medals fit your event — design options, sustainability facts, cost drivers, and limits vs metal.
|
Factor |
Wooden medals |
Metal medals |
|---|---|---|
|
Sustainability |
Renewable material; lower production energy than casting/plating; compostable/recyclable when unpainted |
Recyclable (brass, zinc alloy) but energy-intensive to cast and plate |
|
Certification |
Badges and Medals: FSC or PEFC certified and recycled wood sources |
Recycled metal options available (e.g. recycled zinc alloy) |
|
Typical cost |
Often lower — no moulds, enamel, or electro-plating |
Higher — moulds, finishes, enamel common |
|
Shipping weight |
Lighter — lower freight cost on bulk orders |
Heavier |
|
Custom colour |
UV printing (full colour) + laser etch |
Enamel fill, plating (gold/silver/bronze), print |
|
Unique shapes |
Laser cutting — logos, mountains, cut-outs |
Die shapes — different process |
|
Finish limits |
No enamel cavity; no true metallic plate on wood |
Enamel, antique, matte, dual plate, etc. |
|
Best for |
Schools, fun runs, community events, eco-led brands |
Premium finishes, traditional podium look |
|
End of life |
Reuse, compost, or recycle (if not painted/stained) |
Recycle metal |
For a three-way comparison including insert medals, see Which Medal Type Is Best? Metal vs Wooden vs Insert.
Two main decoration methods define what you can put on the face of a wooden medal:
A laser burns the design into the wood surface. You get crisp lines and contrast — strong for text, logos, and minimal designs. Engraving can be combined with UV print on the same piece.
Full-colour artwork — gradients, graphics, photos — is printed and cured with ultraviolet light so it resists smudging and fading. Many suppliers combine engraving + UV print for texture and colour together.
Medals are not limited to circles. Laser cutting produces custom silhouettes — mountains, surfboards, logos, cut-outs, and layered shapes.
Typical thickness: Wooden medals are commonly 3–6 mm thick — sturdy to wear, lighter than most metal medals.
Each piece of wood has its own grain — no two medals are identical. Common species mentioned in event medal production include oak (classic, rich), birch, bamboo (modern), and walnut. Some makers offer driftwood or stained finishes for a rustic look.
At Badges and Medals, wooden medals and trophies draw on three sources [VERIFY before publish]:
|
Share |
Source |
|---|---|
|
~50% |
FSC-certified supplier |
|
~50% |
Sustainably sourced basswood |
Standalone fact: FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) and PEFC (Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification) are international schemes that verify responsibly managed forests.
Wooden medals skip energy-intensive metal casting and electro-plating. Production is generally lighter on energy than brass or zinc alloy medals with enamel and plating.
Wood is renewable — trees regrow; certified forests are managed for long-term harvest.
Weight reduces shipping emissions per unit on large orders compared with heavy metal batches.
End of life: Unpainted or unstained wooden medals can often be composted or recycled; metal medals are recyclable but required more energy to make.
Order-level programmes: Badges and Medals ties wooden (and other) orders to Plastic Bank, One Tree Planted, and carbon-offset shipping — see How Badges and Medals Sustainability Programmes Work.
Packaging: Sustainable outer boxes and inner fill options are covered in Sustainable Packaging For Medals: What Are The Options?.
Often yes, for comparable custom volumes — especially when you avoid metal-only costs:
That makes wooden medals popular for schools, fun runs, and community events where budget and sustainability both matter.
Be upfront with stakeholders about limits — they drive the wood vs metal decision.
|
Metal feature |
On wood? |
|---|---|
|
Enamel fill (smooth coloured glassy inlay) |
No — enamel needs a metal cavity and heat that damages wood |
|
Gold / silver / bronze plating |
No — not applied to organic materials the same way |
|
Perfectly identical surface |
No — knots, grain, and small natural variation are normal |
|
Metal accents |
Yes — wood can pair with subtle metal details for durability or shine |
If you need enamel or traditional podium plating, metal or hybrid approaches may fit better.
Beyond sustainability, wooden medals offer:
Wooden medals suit events that want story, character, and environmental alignment without defaulting to standard metal circles.
Yes, when wood is responsibly sourced. Look for FSC or PEFC certification or verified recycled timber. Wooden medals use less production energy than cast and plated metal, and unpainted wood can compost or recycle at end of life. Badges and Medals uses certified and recycled wood streams and links orders to Plastic Bank and tree-planting programmes.
Often yes — wood avoids mould, enamel, and plating costs, and lighter weight cuts shipping. Exact pricing depends on size, wood species, print area, and quantity [VERIFY current B&M price bands before publish].
Yes — via UV printing. Laser etching suits single-colour logos and text; UV print adds gradients, photos, and multi-colour art. Engraving and UV can be combined on one medal.
Yes — laser cutting shapes medals beyond circles (e.g. mountains, logos, cut-outs). Metal medals use different tooling; wood is often more flexible for organic silhouettes at community-event volumes.
Best for: schools, fun runs, community races, eco-led brands, and events prioritising affordability + sustainability. Less ideal when: you need enamel fills, precious-metal plating, or a traditional championship metal aesthetic.
Ask for FSC or PEFC chain-of-custody on virgin timber, or documentation on recycled wood sources. For Badges and Medals programmes (ocean plastic, trees, offsets), see the sustainability programmes guide.
Reuse (display, craft), compost untreated wood, or recycle where facilities accept wood — painted or stained medals may not be compostable. Metal medals go to metal recycling.