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Champaca

Champaca is the sacred yellow magnolia of the Indian subcontinent, an absolute extracted from Magnolia champaca and the related white Magnolia alba, prized in niche perfumery for a tropical white-flower profile with tea, ylang and soft-tobacco facets.
Botanical · Magnolia champaca, Magnolia × alba
Origins · Karnataka (India), Java (Indonesia), Madagascar

History

Champaca has been part of Indian perfumery for more than two thousand years, woven into the attar tradition that captured floral notes onto a sandalwood base by hydrodistillation. Hindu and Buddhist temples used the yellow flowers as offerings to Vishnu and Lakshmi; weavers strung them into wedding garlands; the same flowers featured in funeral rites. That sacred status long held back the export trade: most of the Indian crop never left the subcontinent (Wikipedia EN, Magnolia champaca; Première Peau, accessed 2026-05-26).

Western perfumery only met champaca in earnest from the 1960s onwards, when small volumes of solvent-extracted absolute began traveling out of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. Usage stayed confidential for three decades, mostly in niche oriental experiments. The opening of the niche perfumery market in the early 2000s, combined with rising interest in attar-style writing, turned champaca into one of the signature Indo-Asian materials of contemporary perfumery.

The reference modern composition is Champaca by Ormonde Jayne, launched in 2002 and signed by Geza Schoen. Pink pepper, bamboo and neroli open onto a champaca-rice-freesia heart laid over green tea, myrrh and musk: an English reading of an Indian flower, much copied since (Fragrantica, Ormonde Jayne Champaca; Now Smell This). The 2000s also brought Comme des Garçons Series Luxe Champaca (2007, Nathalie Feisthauer) and the early Tom Ford Private Blend release Champaca Absolute (Rodrigo Flores-Roux), each writing the material in a different register.

Botanical origin

The material called champaca in niche perfumery comes from two related trees of the Magnoliaceae family. The dominant species is Magnolia champaca, formally reclassified from Michelia champaca after the merger of Michelia into Magnolia, in line with the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group III (APG III) framework published in 2009 and the earlier proposals by Figlar and Nooteboom in 2004 (Plants of the World Online, Kew Science; Wikipedia EN, accessed 2026-05-26). Some industry suppliers still trade the absolute under the older binomial Michelia champaca.

Perfumery distinguishes two practical varieties. Yellow or golden champaca (Magnolia champaca) carries deep yellow-orange petals, a warm and indolic profile, and a slightly fruity-tropical character. White champaca (Magnolia × alba), a related cultivated hybrid sometimes called joy perfume tree or pak lan, opens creamy white to pale yellow, with a cleaner, fresher, more tea-like absolute (Botanical Realm; Première Peau, White Champaca in Perfumery, accessed 2026-05-26). The two are not interchangeable. Suppliers usually label them separately, and the price difference is significant.

Geographic origins are concentrated in the tropical belt of South and South-East Asia. India remains the historic reference, with plantations in Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, West Bengal and Assam. Indonesia (Java, Sumatra, Bali) has built up export capacity since the early 2000s. Smaller volumes come from southern China (Yunnan, Guangdong), Vietnam, Madagascar, and a confidential output from Hawai'i (United States). The tree reaches up to 30 meters and produces flowers that open at dusk and stay fragrant for only a few hours.

Production and extraction

Champaca flowers are processed almost exclusively by volatile solvent extraction with hexane. Hand-picked at dawn, just after the nocturnal bloom, the flowers go from tree to extractor within hours, since the volatile compounds dissipate quickly once the petals begin to wilt. A first pass yields the concrete, a waxy paste; a second ethanol wash followed by chilled deparaffination delivers the absolute, a viscous golden-brown liquid (Première Peau; Fragrantica champaca note, accessed 2026-05-26).

The yield is famously low. Roughly 0.1 to 0.15 percent of the weight of fresh flowers is recovered as absolute, which means approximately 700 to 1,000 kilograms of flowers for one kilogram of finished material. A handful of houses run supercritical CO2 extraction on champaca Robertet and Albert Vieille; the resulting extract preserves more of the fragile top-note green-tea and tropical-fruit facets, at a markedly higher cost. The traditional Indian route, attar production, hydro-distills the flowers directly onto a sandalwood base rather than producing a free absolute.

Global output remains very confidential. The combined annual production of yellow champaca absolute and white champaca absolute is estimated at a few hundred kilograms to about one ton, against roughly 4,000 tons of rose absolute on the world market each year. Trade prices in 2026 sit in the range of €3,800 to €6,500 per kilogram for Indian yellow champaca absolute and €2,400 to €4,200 per kilogram for the Indonesian grade. White champaca absolute from Magnolia × alba tends to trade at a discount to yellow Indian material, with a fresher and less indolic profile. Champaca is not subject to a significant IFRA restriction.

No synthetic substitute reliably reproduces the full multi-layer profile. Bases sold as Champaca Accord by Givaudan and IFF approximate the heart for industrial briefs but lose the tea-tobacco depth and the indolic warmth that signal natural absolute. As with jasmine sambac, the gap between the natural extract and any reconstitution remains one of the wider in floral perfumery, which keeps champaca an exclusive material for haute parfumerie compositions.

Olfactive profile

Champaca occupies a distinctive corner of the white-flower family. Blind, the absolute reads as a warm, slightly fruity floral with a clear tea inflection and a soft tobacco drydown. Recurring descriptors in the English-language press include magnolia, ylang-ylang, ripe peach, black tea, candle wax and a low-level animalic warmth that places the material adjacent to jasmine, tuberose and indolic orange blossom (Fragrantica champaca note; Bois de Jasmin; Now Smell This, accessed 2026-05-26).

The two perfumery varieties part company at this level. Yellow champaca (Magnolia champaca) is the more indolic, narcotic and tropical of the pair, with a heavier soft-tobacco signature and a denser tea facet on the drydown. White champaca (Magnolia × alba) is cleaner and fresher, with green-tea, freesia and orange-blossom touches and far less indole, which makes it the easier of the two to weave into modern luminous florals. Perfumers shape the choice according to the brief, sometimes using both varieties side by side.

Key characteristics

Main active compounds
2-phenylethyl alcohol, indole (trace, higher in yellow than white), linalool, methyl benzoate, benzyl acetate, methyl anthranilate, beta-caryophyllene (ScienceDirect, CO2 extraction Michelia champaca)
Pyramid position
Heart-dominant, often trailing into the upper base. Lingers six to nine hours on skin and structures the soft-tobacco drydown of Indo-Asian compositions.
Adjacent families
White-flower (jasmine, tuberose, ylang-ylang, orange blossom), tea floral, modern oriental, Indian attar tradition
Usual concentration
0.5 to 4 percent of a formula on average, up to 8 percent in champaca-led niche compositions; reformulation-friendly outside the IFRA scope.

Notable perfumes featuring champaca

Four compositions return regularly in the English-language specialised press as benchmarks for champaca, across British niche, Japanese-inflected niche, French heritage and American Private Blend houses (Fragrantica; Now Smell This; Bois de Jasmin, accessed 2026-05-26).

YearHousePerfumeRole of champaca
2002Ormonde JayneChampacaGeza Schoen. Champaca on a green-tea, rice and myrrh structure; reference modern Western reading of the note.
2007Comme des GarçonsSeries Luxe ChampacaNathalie Feisthauer. Champaca with tuberose, pepper and white musk; cool, almost crystalline writing.
2009Tom FordChampaca Absolute (Private Blend)Rodrigo Flores-Roux. Champaca with cognac, dyer's greenweed, sandalwood and marron glacé; warm gourmand oriental.
2006GoutalSongesIsabelle Doyen and Camille Goutal. Tropical white-flower bouquet with frangipani, tiare and vanilla, often grouped with champaca-adjacent compositions for its narcotic dusk profile.

Frequently asked questions

What does champaca smell like in perfumery?01
Warm tropical white-flower with a tea-like inflection and a soft-tobacco drydown. Yellow champaca (Magnolia champaca) reads as more indolic, narcotic and tropical; white champaca (Magnolia × alba) is fresher and cleaner, with green-tea and orange-blossom touches.
Is white champaca the same plant as yellow champaca?02
No. Yellow champaca is Magnolia champaca (formerly Michelia champaca, reclassified under APG III in 2009). White champaca is Magnolia × alba, a related hybrid sometimes called joy perfume tree. The two yield absolutes with different profiles and different prices.
Why is champaca so rare in niche perfumery?03
Combined yellow and white champaca absolute output is estimated at a few hundred kilograms to about one ton per year, against roughly 4,000 tons of rose absolute. Yield is low (0.1 to 0.15 percent by weight of fresh flowers), the flowers must be processed within hours of opening at dusk, and a large share of the Indian crop is absorbed by domestic ritual and attar use.
How is champaca extracted in modern perfumery?04
The dominant route is volatile solvent extraction with hexane: a first pass yields the concrete, a second ethanol wash with deparaffination yields the absolute. Supercritical CO2 extraction is used by Robertet, Albert Vieille and a few others for a fresher profile at higher cost. The traditional Indian attar route hydro-distills the flowers onto a sandalwood base.

Sources

Published 26 May 2026 · Updated 26 May 2026 · Last factual review: 26 May 2026 · Author: Osmetheca