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Guest Blogging on Thetabletnewsblog – Cross-Industry Insights & Trends
Guest Blogging on Thetabletnewsblog – Cross-Industry Insights & Trends
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10 Things to Consider When Buying Power Poles For Sale

Jun. 23, 2025

Hang the For Sale Sign: Why & When of Buying or Selling Utility Poles

poles are a valuable asset for power utilities, municipalities and telecoms—hundreds to thousands of forty-foot revenue-generating properties. For the most part, poles generally remain under fairly static ownership much of their lives, but there are a few reasons an entity might end up buying or selling utility poles.

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Natural Reasons

If a pole owner buries its plant but other attachers still need their equipment overhead, the original owner may opt to sell the standing pole.

Natural Disasters

When storms or other natural disasters damage or take down poles, sometimes a non-owner will replace the pole before the current owner. In this case, ownership is transferred to the company placing the new pole.

Delayed Transfers

Zero-dollar sales happen when a company inherits a pole in a long-awaited transfer. In this case, the new owner usually pays the cost of removal of the old pole, and the original owner assumes ownership. This also may happens when a larger pole is needed at a site, and its installation results in double wood.

Inherited Assets

In some cases where a subscriber owns a pole and the property changes hands, an attaching company may wish to purchase the pole.

Ownership Dispute

Finally, when ownership of a pole is in dispute, a purported owner may decide to simply offload the asset for a price rather than continue the process of determining true ownership.

Beyond the reason for sale however, for utility pole owners, the bigger question regarding change of pole ownership revolves around what affect buying and selling can have on joint use records.

If an owner is using pen and paper or a typical spreadsheet to record pole statistics, including attachments, the sale of a pole could leave a hole in records that may not be filled until the next field audit. The solution: using a connected joint use management solution that makes communication with attaching companies easy for transfer of equipment as well as seamless internal organization and record-keeping.

Reasons to Buy Used Utility Poles for Pole Barns

Here are the top three reasons – Money, Availability, and Recycling/Reusing.

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Trying to save a few bucks on your pole barn and don’t care about longevity or ease of use, then used utility poles may be the answer. Most people, who are going to invest an average of $50,000 into a new building, prefer to have a design solution which can be relied upon however.

As discussed in my recent articles, most utility poles are replaced due to decay issues. Oil based preservative treatments (like penta or creosote) are affected by time and gravity. As the treatment chemicals wear thin at the ground line, decay begins to occur and the utility company replaces the pole. In an attempt to reuse the poles, the portion which was at the former ground line (the decay zone) should be cutoff and properly disposed of in a landfill. This leaves the remainder of the pole being the portion with little or no treatment chemical remaining.

If one of these poles happens to rot in a new pole barn, the cost to replace it will be more than what was initially “saved”, even if the poles were free.

Building a pole building which requires a structural review of the plans? (In my humble opinion, all plans should be so reviewed.) Building officials are probably not going to “buy in” to the use of used utility poles. Why? There is no way to determine if what remains will meet with the minimum code requirements for preservative treatment.

Fully enclosed building? Many will find the odors of oil based chemicals to be an issue, not to mention having the chemicals continuing to leech from the posts. Even the CCA (Chromated Copper Arsenate) treated pole can no longer be used in residential applications due to EPA (Environment Protection Agency) regulations.

Ease of use – used utility poles are round and tapered. In order to place them in a building so dimensional lumber can be properly affixed, the sides of the pole which will be attached to, are best cut to a flat surface. Besides complexity, this also adds the issues of hazardous chemicals being placed into the air, both as fumes and in the sawdust. Dealing with the taper, means the poles will not be set plumb, in relationship to the actual center of the pole, but will instead be leaning outward, so the outside face is vertical. This may be less of an issue, unless an interior finish of some sort is to be added at a later date.

Many utility companies have used poles laying around – they are not easily disposed of, as they should be taken to a landfill and buried as hazardous waste. This makes the utilities all too happy to either give them away, or to sell them at what seems to be a bargain.

And, while I am all for recycling and reusing, this is just one place where it does not make sense from a practical or economic standpoint.

If you are looking for more details, kindly visit Power Poles For Sale.

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