20 Best Scents Featuring
Tuberose
The narcotic night-bloomer that has been scandalising, seducing, and intoxicating the world for four centuries — in perfumes, candles, and incense.
"Tuberose is not a polite flower. It is opulent, unapologetic, and gloriously alive — the kind of scent that arrives before you do and lingers long after you've gone."
There is a reason Renaissance Italy banned unmarried women from walking through tuberose gardens. The night-blooming flower — native to Mexico, harvested at sunset when its fragrance peaks, extracted with painstaking care — was deemed too narcotic, too erotic, too much. Which is, of course, exactly why we love it.
In perfumery, tuberose is classified as a white floral, but that barely scratches the surface. It is creamy, milky, green, slightly spicy, and deeply animal — a complex creature that transforms depending on the hands that wield it. In a candle, it fills a room like a slow exhalation. In incense, it carries something ancestral, echoing the flower garlands strung at Indian weddings and temple offerings for centuries.
We've selected 20 of the finest tuberose expressions across three formats — 10 perfumes, 6 candles, and 4 incense — alternating between categories so you can experience the full spectrum of what this extraordinary flower can do.
Tuberose: The Flower That Owns the Night
Tuberose (Agave amica, formerly Polianthes tuberosa) is a perennial plant related to agave, native to Mexico, and has been distilled for perfumery since the 17th century. Today, the finest quality is harvested in India and in Grasse, France — gathered by hand at dusk, when the blossoms release their most potent fragrance.
Its scent profile defies easy categorisation. The floral heart is rich and creamy, with undertones that are simultaneously honeyed, green, rubbery, and animalic. It shares molecules with orange blossom, gardenia, and monoi — which is why it pairs so effortlessly with other white florals. But tuberose also stands alone with a confidence that few raw materials can match.
It takes approximately 3,600 hand-picked blossoms to produce a single gram of tuberose absolute. That isn't a footnote. That is obsession made fragrant.
Frédéric Malle
Carnal Flower Eau de Parfum

If tuberose had a manifesto, Carnal Flower would be it. Perfumer Dominique Ropion built this masterpiece around the highest concentration of tuberose absolute ever used in a commercial fragrance — the result is rich, creamy, and almost shockingly alive. Orange blossom and jasmine amplify the white floral heart, while melon and coconut add an unexpected tropical luminosity. Widely described as one of the sexiest perfumes ever created. This is not hyperbole. Uncompromising, opulent, and completely unforgettable.
Diptyque
Tubéreuse Scented Candle

Diptyque doing tuberose in candle form is the olfactory equivalent of a standing ovation. The wax version of their beloved Do Son fragrance brings the tuberose gardens of Vietnam indoors — clean, milky, softly floral, and radiantly beautiful. It fills a room without shouting about it. (And since we're giving their candle the spotlight here, Do Son perfume fans can breathe easy.) Elegant, modern, perpetually chic.
Matière Première
French Flower Eau de Parfum

Matière Première is the house that makes you feel like you've discovered a secret. French Flower builds tuberose into something almost architectural — inspired by a tuberose field at night, the floral heart is spiked with ginger and green tea leaf for a spicy, green edge that transforms the note entirely. Unisex, mysterious, and genuinely thrilling. The kind of fragrance that prompts other fragrance obsessives to lean in and ask, immediately, what you're wearing.
Nippon Kodo
Tokusen Kyara Taikan Premium Incense

Japan's oldest incense house — operating since 1575 — brings ceremonial-grade precision to white floral fragrance. Tokusen Kyara Taikan layers cool, tuberose-adjacent florals over precious kyara aloeswood, creating an ethereal atmosphere that is more temple garden than living room. Light one stick and the room is transformed. Meditative, ancient, and extraordinarily rare. This is incense as spiritual practice, not interior decoration.
Serge Lutens
Tubéreuse Criminelle Eau de Parfum

The name says everything, doesn't it? Tubéreuse Criminelle opens with a gasp-inducing blast of camphor and rubber before the most lush, narcotic tuberose imaginable unfurls underneath. Perfumer Christopher Sheldrake designed it to mimic the flower at its most raw and unsettling — a deliberate provocation that rewards patience with something magnificent. Polarising, brilliant, and absolutely not for the faint of heart. For the brave, it is revelatory.
Amod Aromas
Jardins de l'Inde — 100% Natural Incense Sticks

Meet the Sydney boutique house rewriting the rules of what incense can be. Amod Aromas makes 100% natural hand-rolled sticks using only wood powder, machilus macranth (a tree bark powder native to Sri Lanka, used as the natural binder), botanical gums, and the finest vapour-distilled or cold-pressed essential oils — no charcoal, no synthetic fragrance, no DPG, no compromise.
Jardins de l'Inde — literally "the gardens of India" — is a luminous, airy, sparkling floral composition of three notes: powdery violet opens the experience, a full-bodied rose takes the heart, and creamy tuberose anchors the base in something rich and deeply lingering. Radiant and spontaneous — the olfactory equivalent of walking into a sunlit room full of cut flowers. Joyful rather than heavy, despite the depth of the florals.
Each stick burns for approximately 80 minutes — nearly double the industry standard — and each set of 50 sticks comes housed in a premium magnetic click-top box with a handcrafted six-sided solid brass burner, designed to hold the stick at 60 or 90 degrees. Total burn time: 65 hours. Gift-ready, IFRA compliant, and genuinely extraordinary. If you've been dismissing incense as a format, this is the one that will change your mind entirely.
Creed
Fleurissimo Eau de Parfum

Grace Kelly wore this on her wedding day in 1956. That is, truly, all the endorsement required — but we'll continue. A luminous bouquet of sparkling tuberose, violet, Bulgarian rose, and iris, Fleurissimo is glamorous, timeless, and impossibly chic. It manages to feel simultaneously vintage and utterly contemporary, like Grace Kelly herself. Royalty-approved for over 60 years, and it still earns every compliment it receives.
Jo Malone London
Tuberose & Honey Scented Candle

Jo Malone takes tuberose and wraps it in golden honey and warm amber for a candle that smells like the most expensive bouquet you've ever received, left on a sun-warmed windowsill. Unabashedly luxurious, it fills a room with sheer floral joy without veering into overwhelming territory. Perfect for a long bath, a slow dinner, or simply being alive on a Tuesday. The cream-and-black vessel looks impeccable on any surface.
Christian Dior
Poison Eau de Toilette

When Poison launched in 1985, it didn't merely enter the market — it detonated. Tuberose sits at the explosive heart of this radical oriental floral, surrounded by plum, coriander, honey, and deep opoponax resins. The result is rich, heady, and completely intoxicating — a fragrance so powerful it was reportedly banned from certain restaurants in the 1980s. A legend, an icon, and a reminder that tuberose in the right hands is genuinely dangerous. Exactly as intended.
Kunjudo
Takara Gold Tuberose Incense Sticks

Kunjudo — a Kyoto incense house operating since 1893 — brings extraordinary botanical precision to their Takara Gold Tuberose. The tuberose here is lush and unapologetic, blooming fully over precious woods and soft resins in a composition that is simultaneously ancient and contemporary. Each stick burns slowly, releasing a rich, creamy floral that fills the room without dominating it. This is incense for people who take their home fragrance as seriously as their perfume wardrobe. Which is to say: this is incense for the right people.
BDK Parfums
Tubéreuse Impériale Eau de Parfum

Paris-based BDK Parfums is one of the most exciting niche houses to emerge in the last decade, and Tubéreuse Impériale makes an unambiguous statement of intent. Tuberose absolute is given the full imperial treatment — amplified by ylang-ylang and jasmine, then settled into a creamy sandalwood and vanilla base that is warm, enveloping, and almost edible. Modern niche perfumery at its most confident and its most generous. A house to watch, and a tuberose to covet.
Cire Trudon
Versailles Candle

When your house has been crafting candles since 1643 and once supplied the Palace of Versailles itself, naming a candle after that palace is not hubris — it's earned. Cire Trudon's Versailles evokes the royal gardens in bloom: tuberose and rose at the floral heart, jasmine adding its honeyed complexity, and a green, woody base that grounds the whole magnificent composition. Poured in vegetable and beeswax, in the iconic hand-blown green glass vessel. Quite simply the most regal candle on this list.
Hermès
Twilly d'Hermès Eau de Parfum

Named for Hermès' iconic silk scarf and designed to feel young, bold, and free-spirited, Twilly is a wonderfully irreverent take on tuberose. The creaminess of the flower is contrasted against ginger's fizzy brightness and sandalwood's warm grounding depth — a combination that perfumer Christine Nagel described as deliberately modern. Sophisticated enough for devotees, accessible enough for first-timers. Genuinely wearable across every occasion imaginable.
Sisley Paris
Tuberose Scented Candle

Sisley Paris — a house better known for its extraordinary botanical skincare — brings the same reverence for raw materials to its home fragrance. Their Tuberose candle is a direct, unapologetic celebration of the flower: creamy, white-floral, and genuinely heady in the way that only a brand with serious botanical expertise can achieve. The glass vessel is quietly beautiful, the burn is slow and even, and the scent throw is generously opulent. Sisley doing tuberose is the definition of a house playing to its strengths.
Robert Piguet
Fracas Eau de Parfum

There are perfumes, and then there is Fracas. Created in 1948 and going strong, this is a tuberose bomb dressed in jasmine and iris — opulent, enveloping, and completely unapologetic. Beloved by Madonna, Sofia Coppola, and fragrance critics who have run out of superlatives, Fracas is the perfume equivalent of a grand entrance. You do not wear this quietly. You were not meant to. Why would anyone want to?
Gucci
Bloom Eau de Parfum

Gucci Bloom was a revelation when it launched — a lush, green-floral that put tuberose back on the mainstream map without dumbing it down. Rangoon creeper, jasmine, and tuberose form an almost living accord that smells like a garden just after rain. Light enough for daily wear, beautiful enough to feel special, and with a greenness that saves it from sweetness. Alessandro Michele's ode to unfiltered femininity, bottled with extraordinary conviction.
Carrière Frères
Tuberose — Polianthes Tuberosa Candle

Carrière Frères has been producing botanically inspired candles since 1884, using a proprietary formula that preserves the integrity of the plant's natural scent profile. Their Tuberose candle — labelled with the flower's full Latin name, Polianthes tuberosa, as befits a house of this scientific rigour — is creamy, green, and authentically floral. No embellishment, no sweetening, no compromise. This is what tuberose actually smells like, captured and committed to wax with impeccable French precision.
Amouage
Love Tuberose Eau de Parfum

Amouage — the Omani house that produces some of the most lavishly constructed fragrances on earth — dedicates an entire perfume to tuberose, and the result is exactly as magnificent as you'd expect. Love Tuberose places tuberose absolute at its absolute centre, supported by jasmine, rose, and a warm amber-sandalwood base. Rich, enveloping, and radiantly generous in its sillage. This is tuberose as grand gesture — the olfactory equivalent of receiving an armful of fresh blooms from someone who means it entirely.
Chloé
Atelier des Fleurs Tuberosa 1974 Eau de Parfum

Full circle. Tuberosa 1974 is the fragrance that started at least one beauty editor's lifelong tuberose obsession — a modern homage to Chloé's original 1974 scent, creamy and velvety and impossibly French. Gently spiced, rooted in white florals, and packaged in a vessel so beautiful it would constitute adequate justification for buying it even if the perfume inside were merely good. It is, in fact, extraordinary. Wear it and feel like the very best version of yourself.
The VerdictWhy Tuberose Belongs Everywhere
In a fragrance world racing toward maximum darkness — smoked woods, tar, leather, the inside of a haunted house — tuberose is the quiet act of rebellion. It is narcotic without being dark. Opulent without being heavy. Ancient without being old-fashioned. The flower that scandalised Renaissance Italy now anchors some of the most technically sophisticated fragrances ever created.
The brands on this list span four centuries of craft — from Robert Piguet's 1948 Fracas to a Paris niche house founded in 2016 — but they share one conviction: that tuberose, handled with intelligence and respect for the raw material, is without equal. Whether you burn Amod Aromas' Jardins de l'Inde during your morning ritual, light a Cire Trudon Versailles candle for a slow Sunday dinner, or reach for Frédéric Malle's Carnal Flower before an evening out, you are participating in a fragrant tradition older than most countries.
Tuberose doesn't just scent a room or a skin. It alters the atmosphere entirely. Light it, wear it, burn it — and you'll understand immediately why it has been making people do extraordinary, slightly irrational things for the last four hundred years.
**This post is for informational and review purposes only. Amod Aromas is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by the third-party brands mentioned herein. All trademarks and registered trademarks remain the property of their respective holders. While we strive for accuracy, product images and pricing are sourced from public information and may vary.
