History
Guaiac wood entered Western pharmacopoeia in the early sixteenth century, when Spanish conquistadors brought the hard, resinous timber of Guaiacum officinale back from the Caribbean. The wood was prescribed across Europe between roughly 1517 and the late eighteenth century as a treatment for syphilis, earning the names lignum vitae (tree of life) and lignum sanctum (holy wood) in medical literature of the period (Wikipedia EN, Guaiacum, accessed 2026-05-26).
The shift from pharmacy to perfumery happened slowly. Nineteenth-century French and German extractors began distilling the wood for its warm, smoky aroma, but the material stayed marginal in mainstream compositions until the late twentieth century. Bulnesia sarmientoi, the South American species that now supplies almost all perfumery-grade oil, came into industrial use after Caribbean Guaiacum populations had been depleted by the 1950s (Wikipedia EN, Bulnesia sarmientoi, accessed 2026-05-26).
The pivot for niche perfumery arrived in the mid-2000s with Encre Noire by Lalique (2006, Nathalie Lorson) and the wave of smoky woody compositions that followed. Within ten years, guaiac wood became one of the favorite materials of contemporary niche houses, prized for the unusual rose-tea facet it brings to a fundamentally woody-smoky profile (Fragrantica, Guaiac Wood note page, accessed 2026-05-26).
Botanical origin
In modern perfumery, the word guaiac covers two distinct trees from the Zygophyllaceae family. Bulnesia sarmientoi, native to the Gran Chaco that straddles Paraguay, Argentina and Bolivia, supplies the commercial perfumery-grade oil sold today as guaiacwood oil or champaca wood oil. Guaiacum officinale, the historic Caribbean species, is now rare and largely reserved for traditional medicine, no longer a meaningful perfumery source (Wikipedia EN, Bulnesia sarmientoi; Wikipedia EN, Guaiacum officinale, accessed 2026-05-26).
A persistent confusion in English-language sources blends guaiac wood with Peruvian palo santo (Bursera graveolens), a different genus from a different family (Burseraceae). The two materials share a warm, smoky character but diverge sharply on close evaluation: guaiac carries a distinct rose-tea facet and a buttery softness that palo santo lacks (Fragrantica; Bois de Jasmin notes, accessed 2026-05-26).
Bulnesia sarmientoi has been listed on CITES Appendix II since 2010 in response to severe overharvesting in the Gran Chaco. International trade now requires export permits and chain-of-custody documentation, a constraint that has reshaped sourcing for major suppliers and pushed several houses to develop synthetic woody bases as partial substitutes (CITES species database, Bulnesia sarmientoi, accessed 2026-05-26).
Production and extraction
Guaiac wood oil is produced by steam distillation of wood chips from mature trees, typically 30 to 60 years old. The distillation runs for 8 to 14 hours at atmospheric pressure, yielding around 2 to 4 percent oil by mass of dry wood. The fresh oil is a viscous yellow to amber liquid with a strong tendency to crystallize at room temperature, sometimes forming a soft, butter-like solid below 15 degrees Celsius. This physical behavior reflects the high content of long-chain alcohols, principally guaiol and bulnesol, and has no impact on olfactive quality: gentle warming restores the liquid state (Eden Botanicals technical sheet, Guaiacwood essential oil; Wikipedia EN, Bulnesia sarmientoi, accessed 2026-05-26).
The chemical composition of Bulnesia oil is dominated by guaiol (sesquiterpene alcohol, around 40 to 50 percent of the oil), bulnesol (15 to 25 percent) and alpha-guaiene together with related sesquiterpene hydrocarbons. Trace phenolic compounds, including small amounts of guaiacol-related structures, contribute to the smoky facet shared with cade and birch tar (Perfumer & Flavorist; Robertet technical documentation, accessed 2026-05-26).
Perfumery-grade Bulnesia sarmientoi oil trades in 2026 in a wide range, commonly between 150 and 300 euros per kilogram depending on grade, CITES certification and origin (Paraguay or Argentina). Several industry players have signed responsible-sourcing charters since 2019, coupling traceability with support programs for indigenous Chaco communities. Synthetic captives such as Givaudan derivatives reproduce parts of the woody-smoky profile but, on the consensus of niche perfumers and trade reviews, fall short of the natural oil's signature rose-tea facet (Givaudan technical documentation; Now Smell This, accessed 2026-05-26).
Olfactive profile
Guaiac wood offers one of the most distinctive woody profiles on the perfumer's palette. Blind, it is recognized by a three-part architecture: a smoky, soft-leathery opening that recalls dry wood ash and tanned leather, a rose-tea floral heart that surprises evaluators expecting a straightforward wood, and a warm, lactic-sweet drydown with a soft suede edge (Bois de Jasmin; Now Smell This, accessed 2026-05-26).
The rose-tea facet is the signature of guaiac and the single trait that separates it from every other smoky wood. Cade is sharper and more medicinal, birch tar is harder and more leathery, vetiver is greener and earthier, sandalwood is creamier without the smoke. Only guaiac couples smoke and a soft, almost floral lift, which explains its growing use in masculine niche compositions that want warmth without aggressive smoke.
Key characteristics
Notable perfumes featuring guaiac wood
Five compositions return regularly in the specialized press as benchmarks for the guaiac note in contemporary niche perfumery. The selection spans 2003 to 2010 and covers radical smoky woody writing as well as more polished mainstream uses.
| Year | House | Perfume | Role of guaiac wood |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | Diptyque | Tam Dao | Guaiac wood supports the sandalwood-cedar core; warm woody backbone of the composition (Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-26). |
| 2006 | Guerlain | Bois d'Arménie | Annick Ménardo. Guaiac and incense layered over a pink pepper and benzoin frame (Fragrantica; Bois de Jasmin, accessed 2026-05-26). |
| 2006 | Lalique | Encre Noire | Nathalie Lorson. Guaiac wood paired with vetiver and cypress, reference smoky vetiver-guaiac composition (Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-26). |
| 2009 | Nasomatto | Black Afgano | Alessandro Gualtieri. Guaiac in a dense smoky accord with oud and cannabis facets (Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-26). |
| 2010 | Comme des Garçons | Wonderwood | Antoine Lie. Guaiac inside a radical smoky woody accord built on cedar, sandalwood and oud (Fragrantica; Bois de Jasmin, accessed 2026-05-26). |
Frequently asked questions
Sources
- Wikipedia EN: Bulnesia sarmientoi, botanical and conservation overview (accessed 26 May 2026)
- Wikipedia EN: Guaiacum officinale, historic Caribbean species (accessed 26 May 2026)
- Fragrantica: Guaiac Wood note reference page (accessed 26 May 2026)
- CITES species database: Bulnesia sarmientoi, Appendix II listing 2010 (accessed 26 May 2026)
- Eden Botanicals: Guaiacwood essential oil, technical sheet
- Bois de Jasmin: guaiac wood reviews and the rose-tea facet
- Now Smell This: guaiac historiography in niche perfumery
- Perfumer & Flavorist: chemical composition of guaiacwood oil