Curran Wood Pellets
Premium Grade – Hardwood, Softwood & Blended Options
Manufactured by Curran Renewable Energy in Massena, NY, Curran Wood Pellets are crafted using sustainably-harvested timber, rigorous quality control and no additives or binders. Whether you’re looking for a hardwood-only pellet, a softwood-only variant, or a balanced blend, Curran offers three lines to meet your heating needs.
Read and research the Curran pellets below:
Curran Hardwood Pellets
Curran Softwood Pellets
Curran Blended Pellets
Bottom line: If you’re after a trusted pellet brand with certified, premium-grade standards and multiple fuel options under one name, Curran Wood Pellets stand out. The key is selecting the correct variant—hardwood, softwood, or blend—that matches your stove setup and regional availability.
Where to buy Curran Wood Pellets
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Summary
Great people and a pretty nice pellet. I lost my old reviews so I’m going to update this year.






17 Responses
I have a lopi stove . These pellets are terrible I have to clean my stove every 2 days they backed up in the feeder tube and caught the pellets in the hopper on fire. I will never buy again.
where near springfield, Vt can I buy your blended or softwood pellets and what is the current cost?
where neasr springfield, Vt can I buy your blended or softwood pellets and what is the current cost?
I’ve used the blend for the past two years. This year I bought 4 tons of pellets and was running low and bought another ton. this last ton is nothing but ash and cleaning the stove two to three times a day. My chimney vent out the side of the house and for the first time I have a black soot spot under it. The last ton had a new style bag and apparently a new formula. I have a quadra fire mt. vernon stove and never had this problem. I went to tractor supply and bought 4 bags of there brand and what a difference. clean and hot. My conclusion is that something has changed with Curran and not for the better. STAY AWAY
I have been conducting a test burn this week (as temps where I am are very cold) because the Vermont Pellets I use are completely sold out in my area. The company I buy pellets from sells the Hardwood/Softwood blend.
My observations have been that these produce a TON of ash. About 4 times what I’m used to per bag compared to the Vermont Softwood pellets. I have to clear out the stove 2 times a day during these super cold days, and there is over a cup and a half each time left behind. They aren’t nearly as hot as I anticipated them being, but do an ample job.
My conclusion (other than I will be ordering 6 tons of Vermont Pellets in advance this summer), so that they’re okay for secondary heat, but not something I’d use as a primary heat source. The ash is out of control, and can be a headache. I’ll be looking at some other softwood options as an alternative.