Oud is a category, not a single smell. Real agarwood reads dark, resinous, and barnyard-animalic — closer to old leather and damp wood than to anything that grows on a tree above ground. The synthetic oud bases used in most commercial perfumes smell cleaner: smoky, slightly medicinal, with a dry woody backbone and the resinous edge sanded down. A designer oud and a niche oud bomb are named after the same word and share almost no common ground.
The Oud note appears across 717 published fragrances in our catalog. Use this page to compare how different brands work with Oud within the woody family.

Tom Ford Oud Wood, 2007. The reference for Western polished oud: cardamom and rosewood opening over a smoothed oud accord and sandalwood base. Created by Richard Herpin and effectively responsible for turning oud into a Western commercial category.

Maison Crivelli Oud Maracujá, 2023. Passionfruit, neroli, and resinous oud — a fruit-oud where the oud is genuinely the spine, not just the marketing. The contemporary niche answer to oud-fatigue: the note doing real work in a frame that isn't rose-

Maison Francis Kurkdjian Oud Satin Mood, 2015. Damask rose and violet

Amouage Interlude Man, 2012. Pierre Negrin's maximalist take: oregano, incense, frankincense

Louis Vuitton Ombre Nomade, 2018. Jacques Cavallier-Belletrud built it around raspberry and birch tar over a glowing

Mancera Red Tobacco, 2017. Saffron and incense up top, tobacco and oud in the base. Niche-priced and projection-heavy; the gateway for buyers coming to oud from cigar lounges rather than the Gulf.

Xerjoff Alexandria II, 2012. Egyptian jasmine and dates over a tonka-and-oud base. The gourmand-oud — sweet enough to feel decadent, dense enough to last through the night.

Memo Paris African Leather, 2015. Aliénor Massenet's chypre framework — cardamom up top,
Oud is heavy and animalic; damask rose is rich and slightly bitter. They balance, and the pairing has become the dominant niche shortcut for expensive Middle Eastern-style compositions.
Saffron adds a golden leathery facet that knits naturally with oud's smoky core. Almost every contemporary luxury oud uses this connector.
Amber rounds and warms oud's drier wood facets, producing the radiant blockbuster effect — the Ombre Nomade lineage.
Two heavy base notes that share an earthy resinous register. Stacking them produces the densest possible base for oriental compositions.
The word "oud" is the Arabic ʿūd — literally "wood" — used in perfumery as shorthand for agarwood, the dark resinous heartwood that certain Aquilaria trees produce only when infected with a specific mold. Healthy Aquilaria is pale and unscented; the resin forms as a defense response, which is why wild oud is rare enough that Aquilaria malaccensis is now critically endangered and trade is governed by CITES. India's April 2024 quota allows roughly 7 metric tons of agarwood oil annually for legal export — for a global fragrance industry the same fraction sees as a rounding error. The chemistry is dominated by oxygenated sesquiterpenes and chromones (agarospirol, jinkohol, jinkoh-eremol), but the smokier ouds also carry traces of the same molecules you would find in old leather and aged whisky barrels.
The note arrives in Western perfumery early — Yves Saint Laurent's M7 (2002) is the often-cited modern beachhead — but the 2007 release of Tom Ford Oud Wood is what turned oud into a Western commercial category. What Tom Ford did was smooth: cardamom and rosewood up top, sandalwood underneath, a polished oud accord in the middle, none of the barnyard. A decade of designer oud-and-rose flankers followed; by the late 2010s the note had been gourmandized (Mancera's Red Tobacco, Xerjoff Alexandria II), incense-ified (Amouage Interlude Man), and made into amber-radiant blockbusters (Louis Vuitton Ombre Nomade, 2018). Outliers exist — Creed Royal Oud (2011) treats it as a clean base support rather than a centerpiece — but across the catalog, just under fourteen thousand fragrances now list oud as a note, a scale that arrived in roughly fifteen years.
Most fragrances labeled oud today contain little or no natural agarwood oil. The label functions more like a stylistic flag — dark, rich, Middle Eastern-inflected — than a guarantee of material. That is not necessarily a problem; the best synthetic oud bases (Norlimbanol, Karanal, the proprietary oud-naphtha accords the big houses guard) are extraordinary perfumery ingredients on their own merits. But it explains why oud fragrances vary so wildly. A Creed-style fresh oud, a Nasomatto barnyard bomb, and a Memo leather-oud are all named after the same word and share almost no common ground. Treat oud as a starting hypothesis to be confirmed by sample, not a finished claim.
Both come from resin; frankincense pushes the composition toward incense and ritual rather than leather and barn — the Interlude Man axis.
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M. Micallef
Aoud

Madonna
Truth or Dare Naked

Atelier des Ors
Rose Omeyyade
Eau De Parfum

Lattafa
Ajayeb Dubai Portrait

Jacques Bogart
One Man Show Ruby Edition

Rania J.
T. Habanero

Mugler
Alien Oud Majestueux

Parfums de Marly
Kuhuyan

Bortnikoff
Triad
Extrait

Phlur
Vanilla Skin
Eau De Parfum

Boadicea the Victorious
Green Sapphire

Philly & Phill
Date me in Downtown

Astrophil & Stella
Nabati

MariaL
Yours Deeply

Montale
Oudyssee

Kai Porten Parfums Privés
Cherry X

Kayali
Invite Only Amber | 23

Marc Gebauer
Killer Instinct
Parfum

Amouage
Opus VII - Reckless Leather
Parfum

Perris Monte Carlo
Oud Imperial
Eau De Parfum

Perris Monte Carlo
Bois d'Oud

Juicy Couture
Dirty English
Eau De Toilette
Lubin
Korrigan

Versace
Eros Najim
Parfum