Botanical and geographic origin
In perfumery, the word oud (transliteration of the Arabic oudh, meaning "wood") refers to the aromatic material extracted from the resin-soaked heartwood of trees in the Aquilaria genus, family Thymelaeaceae. Four species supply the international trade: Aquilaria malaccensis (India Assam, Malaysia, Indonesia, Bangladesh), Aquilaria crassna (Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, considered the historic benchmark), Aquilaria sinensis (southern China) and Aquilaria filaria (eastern Indonesia, Papua) (Wikipedia, Agarwood; IUCN Red List, accessed 2026-05-26).
The defining trait of oud is that healthy Aquilaria wood is odourless. The prized aromatic resin forms only when the tree is infected by a parasitic mold, principally Phialophora parasitica, sometimes alongside other Ascomycete fungi. In response to the infection, the tree secretes a dark defensive resin that gradually impregnates the heartwood: this resin-saturated wood, called agarwood, is what perfumery uses. In wild populations, only 2 to 7 percent of Aquilaria trees develop a fungal infection deep enough to produce usable resin (Wikipedia, Agarwood; Fragrantica note page; Eden Botanicals technical reference, accessed 2026-05-26).
Eight origins structure the global market. Cambodia remains the historic reference for Aquilaria crassna, with a profile widely described as sweet and noble. Laos and Vietnam also produce A. crassna. Assam (India) and Bangladesh deliver A. malaccensis in a more smoky, barnyard register. Indonesia (Borneo, Sumatra, Papua), Malaysia (peninsular and Borneo) round out the supply (Wikipedia; Now Smell This; Bois de Jasmin, accessed 2026-05-26). Aquilaria malaccensis was listed on CITES Appendix II in 1995; the listing was extended to the full Aquilaria genus in 2005, which restricts international trade and pushed the trade toward cultivated plantations and inoculation programmes in Thailand and southern China (CITES species database; Wikipedia, Agarwood, accessed 2026-05-26).
Olfactive profile
Oud delivers one of the most complex and polarizing profiles on the perfumer's palette. Blind, it is recognized by a three-part architecture: a dark, animalic and faintly medicinal opening reminiscent of dried blood and iodine, a deep smoky-woody heart that recalls warm stable, tobacco and old leather, and a resinous, ambery, exceptionally tenacious drydown (Fragrantica oud note; Bois de Jasmin, accessed 2026-05-26).
The profile shifts sharply with origin and maturation. Cambodi oud (Aquilaria crassna) is the historic benchmark, described as dark, faintly floral and rich in noble animalic facets. Hindi oud from Assam runs smoky and barnyard, sometimes called "fermented" in the specialised press. Laotian oud reads medicinal, almost veterinary. Borneo oud sits green and mineral, lighter on the animalic side. Maturation of the resin in the heartwood after infection runs 5 to 20 years, and longer maturation deepens the smoky-balsamic register (Now Smell This; Persolaise oud series, accessed 2026-05-26).
There is no other material in perfumery that polarizes blind testers the way oud does: half the room reads dried fruit and balsam, the other half reads warm stable.According to Bois de Jasmin and Persolaise oud reviews
Key characteristics
Production and extraction
Oud production is one of the longest and most uncertain in perfumery. Three sourcing routes coexist today, each with a distinct yield and quality profile.
- Wild harvest in the forests of Southeast Asia and Assam. Now tightly restricted by CITES (Appendix II listing for Aquilaria malaccensis in 1995, extended to the full Aquilaria genus in 2005). Only historic stock and a few permits issued under controlled forestry programmes remain legally accessible (CITES species database, accessed 2026-05-26).
- Natural plantations awaiting spontaneous infection of the trunk by Phialophora parasitica or related fungi. Success rate stays low (2 to 7 percent) and the timeframe is long, 15 to 30 years before harvest.
- Artificial inoculations, pioneered in the 2000s and generalised since 2010, drill the trunk and introduce the fungus directly. Success rate exceeds 50 percent and harvest time falls to 5 to 10 years, but purists rate the olfactive quality below wild stock.
Extraction is carried out by hydrodistillation, the traditional method, in which ground resinous heartwood and water are co-distilled for an unusually long cycle of 10 to 30 days. The slow distillation extracts the heavy sesquiterpenes that carry oud's depth. The output, called oud oil or dehn al oudh, is a very dark, viscous liquid. Modern solvent extraction and supercritical CO2 extraction, more recent, deliver a brighter, more floral profile but a shorter market history (Wikipedia, Agarwood; Eden Botanicals oud technical sheet, accessed 2026-05-26). Yield is famously low: 1 to 3 percent of the weight of resin-saturated wood, and a single tree may yield only a few grams of premium oil.
Oud is among the most expensive raw materials sold in perfumery. Trade press and specialist suppliers cite figures of USD 50,000 to USD 250,000 per kilogram for premium wild Cambodian oud oil, when legally available. Cultivated A. crassna from inoculated plantations trades roughly USD 5,000 to USD 15,000 per kilogram. Indian Assam plantation oud is more accessible, around USD 3,000 to USD 8,000 per kilogram (Now Smell This oud market essays; Bois de Jasmin oud series; specialist supplier data, accessed 2026-05-26).
Several synthetic captives reproduce facets of the oud profile and underpin commercial Western perfumery. Norlimbanol (Givaudan) supplies the dry, animalic, slightly leathery facet. The Synthetic Oud captives developed by Givaudan and IFF deliver smoky-resinous accents at controlled cost. Adjacent molecules such as Z11 and Trisamber are routinely used as boosters. Cypriol (nagarmotha) essential oil and a smoky patchouli fraction sometimes function as partial natural substitutes. None of these materials reproduces the full complexity of natural oud; premium niche oud compositions in 2026 still anchor on the natural oil (Givaudan technical sheet; IFF synthetic oud captives; Perfumer & Flavorist oud feature, accessed 2026-05-26).
History in perfumery
Oud has been used in perfumery and ritual for more than 2,000 years. Sumerian texts, Vedic Sanskrit literature, Chinese pharmacopoeias and Arabic medical writings all reference agarwood as a precious aromatic for incense, anointing oils and medicine. Arabic perfumery made it a signature material from antiquity onwards; in the Gulf states (United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman), premium oud remains, in 2026, more valuable by the gram than gold (Wikipedia, Agarwood; Now Smell This, "The History of Oud", accessed 2026-05-26).
Western perfumery largely ignored oud until the early 2000s. The turning point for Western mainstream perfumery is M7 by Yves Saint Laurent in 2002, signed by Jacques Cavallier and Alberto Morillas, the first commercial Western fragrance to place a declared oud accord at the center of its pyramid (Fragrantica M7 entry; Persolaise review, accessed 2026-05-26). Oud Wood by Tom Ford in 2007, signed by Richard Herpin, then consecrated oud as a code of Western niche luxury, alongside Black Aoud by Montale (around 2006), which had already pushed a more raw, animalic Western oud reading.
From 2009 onwards, every major niche house released at least one oud composition: Oud 27 by Le Labo (2009, Frank Voelkl), Royal Oud by Creed (2011), Oud Ispahan by Dior (2012, Francois Demachy), Oud Satin Mood by Maison Francis Kurkdjian (2014) and the Oud Stars collection by Xerjoff (from 2007 onwards). Arabic perfumery houses such as Amouage, Rasasi, Lattafa, Al Haramain and the artisanal attar workshops of the Gulf remain the reference for serious oud writing in 2026 (Fragrantica; Bois de Jasmin oud reviews; Persolaise Middle East series, accessed 2026-05-26).
Notable perfumes
Seven compositions return regularly in the specialised press as Western benchmarks for the oud note. The selection spans 2002 to 2014 and covers commercial Western mainstream, niche luxury and Western artisanal readings of the material.
| Year | House | Perfume | Role of oud |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Yves Saint Laurent | M7 | Jacques Cavallier and Alberto Morillas. First mainstream Western composition built around a declared oud accord. |
| 2006 | Montale | Black Aoud | Pierre Montale. Raw oud-rose accord, foundational reference for Western niche oud writing. |
| 2007 | Tom Ford | Oud Wood | Richard Herpin. Smooth, polished oud on cedar and sandalwood; established oud as a code of Western niche luxury. |
| 2009 | Le Labo | Oud 27 | Frank Voelkl. American niche reading of oud, dense and resinous; cult status in niche perfumery. |
| 2011 | Creed | Royal Oud | Oud combined with citrus and woods, British perfumery reading of the note. |
| 2012 | Dior | Oud Ispahan | Francois Demachy. Oud anchored on Damascus rose, reference of the Dior Privée oud line. |
| 2014 | Maison Francis Kurkdjian | Oud Satin Mood | Francis Kurkdjian. Oud, rose and violet, polished contemporary Parisian writing. |
Frequently asked questions
Sources
- Wikipedia: Agarwood, botanical, regulatory and historical overview (accessed 26 May 2026)
- Fragrantica: Oud note reference page (accessed 26 May 2026)
- Basenotes: Oud raw material entry with perfume index
- CITES species database: Aquilaria malaccensis (Appendix II 1995), Aquilaria spp. (Appendix II 2005)
- Eden Botanicals: Oud Cambodian technical sheet
- Givaudan: Synthetic Oud captives and Norlimbanol technical reference
- Now Smell This: oud historiography, M7 and Oud Wood reviews
- Bois de Jasmin: oud reviews and origin-by-origin tasting essays
- Persolaise: oud series and Middle East perfumery reviews