History and terroir
Mysore sandalwood takes its name from the city of Mysore, in the state of Karnataka in southern India, which was for centuries the trading hub of Santalum album. The wood was so valuable that the kingdom of Mysore declared the tree a royal monopoly in 1792, with every sandalwood tree the property of the Crown regardless of whose land it grew on. That status of royal tree, maintained under Tipu Sultan and inherited by the British colonial administration and then by the independent Indian state, made the oil distilled around Mysore and Bangalore the absolute reference for sandalwood in Western perfumery. For nearly a century the word Mysore became a synonym for quality, almost an appellation, long before any legal text granted it that standing.
That dominance rested on a precise terroir. Santalum album is a hemiparasitic tree of the dry forests of the Deccan plateau, drawing part of its sap from the roots of host plants and taking several decades to build the fragrant heartwood perfumery seeks. The combination of soil, climate and particular host species gave the wood of Karnataka a richness in santalols rarely matched elsewhere. That natural scarcity, long masked by colonial abundance, became critical at the end of the twentieth century when overharvesting, illegal felling and spike disease collapsed the wild stands and led to the species being classified as vulnerable. The export of Indian wood and oil is now tightly restricted and concerns only certified old stocks or controlled plantations.
Production and extraction
Sandalwood oil is obtained by steam distillation of the heartwood and roots, ground to a fine powder. Yield and quality depend directly on the age of the tree, since a Santalum album needs twenty-five to forty years to develop a heartwood rich enough to distil, which explains both the high price and the slowness of the supply chain. The historic Mysore oil routinely assayed at more than ninety percent santalols, the molecules behind the creamy, lactonic effect, a concentration that served the whole profession as a benchmark for decades.
The geography of production has shifted profoundly. Unable to source freely in India, the industry turned to the plantations of Santalum album developed in Australia, mainly in the Kununurra region of the far north of Western Australia, which now supply most of the Indian sandalwood oil legally available on the world market. This Australian oil, cultivated and traceable, comes close to the Indian profile without always restoring its roundness. True Mysore sandalwood, distilled from Karnataka trees, circulates only in very small quantities as old certified stock whose authenticity is checked by analysis. It is this tension between a historic reference that has become almost unobtainable and a new supply, sustainable but distinct, that structures the market today.
Olfactive profile
Mysore sandalwood is recognised by a creamy woody profile of unusual softness. Where many woods are dry or rasping, it is lactonic, almost milky, with a vanillic facet and a buttery roundness that wraps a composition rather than cutting through it. Connoisseurs credit it with a warm, faintly spicy signature, a base that settles slowly and lasts for hours on the skin without ever turning aggressive.
That softness comes from its richness in alpha-santalol and beta-santalol. Compared with the drier, more resinous Australian Santalum spicatum, or with the Santalum austrocaledonicum of New Caledonia (France), the historic Mysore reads as the creamiest and most enveloping of all sandalwoods. It is precisely this texture, more than a simple smell of wood, that made it an irreplaceable material in the eyes of perfumers and that synthetic molecules approach without quite equalling.
Why Mysore sandalwood matters in niche perfumery
Mysore sandalwood holds a place in perfumery comparable to a great wine, with a precise origin, a reputation built on a century of use and a scarcity that has turned a once-ordinary material into an object of desire. What it offers that cannot be replaced is not simply a smell of wood but a texture. Its creamy, lactonic blend acts as a binder: it rounds the angles of a composition, prolongs floral notes, softens spices and gives the base a velvety sweetness few materials can produce. For many perfumers it is the very definition of woody elegance, an immediately legible olfactory comfort that signed the great compositions of the twentieth century.
Its value today rests on an equation that has become almost insoluble. The tree takes decades to mature, the species is protected and Indian export is locked down, so that authentic Mysore sandalwood barely circulates except as old stock. Santalum album oil, now mostly from Australian plantations, trades at around two to three thousand dollars per kilogram, and the rare lots of Indian origin reach far higher sums. This scarcity is not a sales argument but an agronomic and regulatory constraint, which places Mysore sandalwood in the same category of heritage materials as ambergris or the rose of Grasse.
That is what makes it a strong marker for niche perfumery. Where the industry adopted synthetic substitutes en masse, Givaudan Sandalore and Javanol or Firmenich Polysantol, which restore the woody clarity at controlled cost and in unlimited quantity, niche houses claim either a high-grade, traceable, sustainable Australian sandalwood or the sparing use of old Mysore stock as a rare touch. The olfactory heritage itself remains alive. Chanel set the reference as early as 1926 with Bois des Iles, composed by Ernest Beaux around a creamy sandalwood that is still the archetype of the genre. Guerlain carried that writing to its peak in 1989 with Samsara, built on a massive dose of sandalwood and jasmine. The name Mysore itself is still invoked as a promise, for example by Serge Lutens, evidence of the evocative power of this origin even when contemporary formulas rest on a sustainable or reconstituted sandalwood.
Working Mysore sandalwood, or laying claim to its spirit, therefore commits a house on two fronts at once. On the olfactory side, the task is to recover that lactonic roundness the connoisseur recognises among all others. On the ethical and narrative side, it means owning a sourcing choice, sustainable natural or historic stock, and telling it with transparency. That is exactly the role niche perfumery has given itself: to preserve the memory of a material that has become almost impossible to find, to distinguish a sandalwood of character from a commodity sandalwood, and to make the constraint of scarcity a signature rather than a renunciation.
Regulatory framework and alternatives
The status of Indian sandalwood is one of strict control. The Indian state long held the monopoly on the resource, with felling and trade of Santalum album reserved to the forest authorities under the royal-tree doctrine inherited from 1792. Cultivation on private land was only gradually allowed from 2001 onwards, following the Karnataka Forest Amendment Act and the relaxations of 2001 and 2002, in the hope of reviving a legal supply chain, though the state retained control of the trade. The species is listed as vulnerable on the IUCN Red List, and its export remains tightly monitored to fight trafficking and illegal felling.
Faced with this scarcity, two routes coexist. The first is agronomic, with the long-term Santalum album plantations run in Australia, which offer a legal, traceable and certified Indian sandalwood oil, now the main world source. The second is chemical, with sandalwood-smelling molecules such as Givaudan Sandalore, Ebanol and Javanol or Firmenich Polysantol, which reproduce the woody, creamy facets with great consistency and are used massively in functional perfumery as well as fine fragrance. None of these solutions restores exactly the lactonic richness of the historic Mysore, but all have helped preserve woody writing while easing the pressure on wild forests.
Notable houses and perfumes
Four compositions illustrate the place of creamy sandalwood in perfumery history and in contemporary niche creation.
| Year | House | Perfume | Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1926 | Chanel | Bois des Iles | Ernest Beaux. Creamy aldehydic sandalwood, the historic archetype of the genre. |
| 1989 | Guerlain | Samsara | Jean-Paul Guerlain. A massive sandalwood and jasmine dose, the modern tribute to the Indian wood. |
| 2003 | Diptyque | Tam Dao | Daniel Moliere. A luminous, lactic niche reading of sandalwood, now a reference of the genre. |
| 2011 | Le Labo | Santal 33 | Frank Voelkl. A synthetic-led modern reading of sandalwood that became a global cult. |