Definition
Mandarin essential oil is produced primarily in Italy (Sicily), Spain, and Brazil by cold expression of the fresh peel. Green mandarin (harvested early, less ripe) has a sharper, more bitter, and terpenic character. Red mandarin (harvested ripe) is sweeter, more floral, with aldehyde facets. Both are used in perfumery, with green mandarin preferred in fresh modern compositions and red mandarin in sweeter oriental accords (ISIPCA teaching materials, accessed 2026-05-27).
The key odorant compounds include methyl N-methylanthranilate (the floral-sweet component), limonene, gamma-terpinene, and thymol.
In composition
Mandarin appears in citrus colognes, light oriental openings, citrus-floral accords, and Mediterranean-inspired compositions. It blends naturally with bergamot, neroli, petitgrain, rose, and vetiver. Its slightly honeyed-floral facet makes it more complex than sweet orange in perfumery.
Several niche houses use mandarin as a central material rather than a supporting top note, building entire compositions around its fleeting but distinctive character. Bitter orange (bigarade) is the related citrus species that yields neroli, petitgrain, and bitter orange oil as distinct materials (Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-27).