Vetiver Perfumes & Fragrances

Vetiver fragrance note icon

Vetiver smells earthy, smoky and slightly grassy, with a cool, almost citrus lift. It is one of the few roots used widely in perfumery and reads crisp and bitter rather than sweet.

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The plant is Chrysopogon zizanioides, a tall tropical grass whose roots are harvested, washed, dried and steam-distilled. Haitian vetiver is considered the finest, with a clean, grapefruit-like top; Javanese vetiver is smokier and darker; Bourbon vetiver from Réunion sits between the two. Distillation can take twenty-four hours or more, and the resulting oil is one of the most complex natural materials in the industry.

Vetiver is a base note and a structural anchor. Perfumers use it in fougeres alongside lavender and coumarin, in chypres with oakmoss and bergamot, and in modern compositions as a clean, dry alternative to patchouli. It pairs particularly well with citrus, iris and leather.

Vetiver performs year-round, reading coolest in hot weather and most resinous in winter layered with wood and spice.