
Jasmine Fragrance Oil is a scented oil that recreates the sweet, floral aroma of jasmine flowers for use in candles, soaps, bath and body products, and home fragrance. Azlok's version opens with fresh, slightly green top notes, moves into a rich, floral and indolic heart, and settles into creamy, musky, warm undertones. Priced from ₹449, it is a ready-to-use fragrance rather than a therapeutic essential oil, and it should not be ingested.
What Jasmine Fragrance Oil Smells Like
Jasmine is one of the most recognised floral scents in the world, and this oil captures its full character. The word indolic describes that heady, almost animalic depth real jasmine has — it is what makes the flower smell alive rather than flat and sugary. Here is how the scent unfolds:
- Top note: sweet, fresh and slightly green
- Middle note: rich, floral and indolic
- Base note: creamy, musky and warm
The oil is a light yellow liquid. Because the base notes are warm and long-lasting, jasmine works beautifully as a heart note in blends and holds well in finished products.
Where You Can Use It
This fragrance oil is formulated for a wide range of applications. Common uses include:
- Candles: soy, beeswax and paraffin candles, plus wax melts
- Cold and melt-and-pour soap
- Bath bombs and bath salts
- Body and facial scrubs, creams and lotions
- Shower gels, shampoos and conditioners
- Lip balms and lipsticks (skin-safe formulations)
- Reed diffusers and room sprays
It pairs naturally with sandalwood, rose, vanilla, ylang-ylang and citrus if you like to build your own signature blends.
How to Use It: Dosage and Method
Fragrance load depends on the product, so always follow your base supplier's guidance and any IFRA limits for skin-contact items. As a general starting point:
- Candles: add roughly 6–10% fragrance by weight of wax, stirring in at the correct temperature for your wax type (usually around 60–65°C for soy).
- Soap: around 3% of your total batch weight; test in small batches as jasmine can behave differently in cold process.
- Lotions, gels and scrubs: typically 0.5–1.5%, kept within recommended leave-on limits.
- Diffusers: blend with a suitable diffuser base or carrier as directed.
Start low, cure or rest your product, then adjust. Jasmine is potent — a little goes a long way, and overloading can cause the scent to turn sharp or affect how a candle burns.
Safety Notes
Fragrance oils are for external, formulated use only. Please keep these points in mind:
- Do not ingest and do not apply undiluted to skin.
- Patch test any new skin product on a small area before regular use.
- Keep the neat oil away from children and pets.
- Work in a ventilated space and avoid contact with eyes.
- This is a fragrance oil, not an essential oil — it is for scent, not aromatherapy or medicinal use.
- Refer to the product's MSDS and allergen report for detailed handling and labelling requirements, especially if you sell your products.
Buying and Storage Tips
Azlok stocks Jasmine Fragrance Oil in sizes from 100 GM right up to 25 KG, so hobbyists and small businesses can both buy sensibly. If you are testing a new recipe, start with the 100 GM pack before committing to bulk.
- Store in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight and heat.
- Keep the cap tightly closed to prevent evaporation and scent loss.
- Shelf life is about 2 years when stored properly.
- Use clean, dry tools when measuring to avoid contamination.
Made in India and supplied in packaging to suit your requirement, it is a reliable choice whether you are pouring a single batch of candles at home or scaling up production.
FAQ
Is Jasmine Fragrance Oil the same as jasmine essential oil?
No. A fragrance oil is a scent formulation designed for candles, soaps and cosmetics. It is not a steam-distilled or absolute essential oil and is not intended for aromatherapy or internal use.
Can I apply it directly to my skin?
Not neat. It should be added to a finished, properly formulated product at safe usage rates. Always patch test before regular use.
How much fragrance oil should I add to candles?
A common range is 6–10% by weight of wax, added at the right temperature for your wax. Test small batches to find what burns cleanly and smells right.
How long does the oil last?
About two years when stored in a cool, dry place with the cap tightly sealed and away from sunlight.
Which size should I buy first?
If you are new to it, start with the 100 GM pack to test your recipes, then move to larger sizes like 1 KG or 5 KG once you settle on a formula.