The tree is used for timber. It has dark brown to blackish brown outer wood and brown inner wood. It is known by the Indonesian vernacular name
sagé hitam, with
sagé as the common name of the tree and
hitam meaning black. It is used by local people for houses and fences, and logged commercially. Since the 2000s it has been the target of massive illegal logging in parts of its range, including in
Lorentz National Park. The
Dani people of the
Baliem Valley in western New Guinea use the leaves and bark of
N. brassii and
N. starkenborghiorum (both commonly known as
sagé) to treat many chronic illnesses with symptoms resembling cancer and degenerative diseases.
Nothofagus brassii may contain
Nothofagin, a chemical constituent also found in
N. fusca from New Zealand. Nothofagin is a
dihydrochalcone, a phenolic antioxidant and C-linked phloretin glucoside, which may account for its efficacy in traditional medicine. ==References==