The most luxurious-smelling masala incense stick in the Namaste Mandala range, and the one most likely to make someone ask what you are burning. Oud — sometimes spelled oudh or agarwood — is one of the most expensive raw materials in perfumery. Even in incense-stick form the character comes through: deep, woody, richly complex, with a soft smoky undertone that lingers long after the stick has burned out. This is incense that makes a room feel atmospheric, not just scented.
What You'll Notice First
The smoky, slightly sharp top notes settle within the first few minutes into a richer, creamier woody heart.
The base is warm and balsamic, with a persistence that is characteristic of oud — this fragrance stays in a room long after the smoke has cleared, settling into fabrics and soft furnishings.
The masala base smooths out the edges, giving the scent a rounder, more approachable profile than burning raw agarwood chips.
One stick is more than sufficient for a large room. In small or enclosed spaces, the scent becomes very dominant very quickly — ventilation is important.
Evening and night use suits it best. The deep, warm, slightly smoky character feels opulent after dark in a way that can feel heavy during daytime.
Oud-Style Fragrance, Masala Paste, Bamboo Core
Oud is a dark, resinous wood formed when Aquilaria trees become infected with a specific type of mould. The tree produces a dense, aromatic resin in response, saturating the heartwood and transforming it into agarwood — heavy, dark, and intensely fragrant. It is the infected, resin-rich wood that is prized, not the healthy tree. The scent is difficult to compare to anything else: deep and woody at its foundation, with facets that can read as smoky, leathery, sweet, balsamic, or even slightly animalic depending on source and quality.
At this price point, the composition uses oud-style fragrance materials rather than significant quantities of pure agarwood oil. This is standard across the incense and fragrance industry — the vast majority of oud-fragranced products use synthetic oud molecules or oud-adjacent materials. What matters is whether it smells good, and this does. Each pack contains 15 sticks, handmade in India. Mandala-pattern packaging. Pack dimensions: 23 × 4.5 × 2 cm. Weight: approximately 39 g.
Burning Oud Incense
Light the tip, let it flame, blow out. Place in a holder with ash catchment. The afterscent is persistent: expect the room to carry traces of the fragrance for hours, and fabrics may retain it longer. If you do not want your curtains to smell like oud for a day or two, burn near an open window. Start with one stick and see how your space responds before burning regularly. Burn time: approximately 30–45 minutes per stick. Do not leave unattended.
A good trick for entertaining: light a stick half an hour before guests arrive, extinguish it, and let the lingering afterscent do the work.
Why Oud Matters
High-quality agarwood oil can cost more per ounce than gold. The wood itself, when of exceptional grade, sells for tens of thousands of dollars per kilogram. This value is driven by scarcity: only a small percentage of Aquilaria trees develop the mould infection that produces agarwood, and the process takes years. Wild Aquilaria populations have been devastated by overharvesting — several species are listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List.
The fragrance has been central to Middle Eastern and South Asian cultures for millennia. In the Gulf states, burning agarwood chips (bukhoor) is a standard hospitality practice — guests are welcomed with oud smoke. In Japanese culture, agarwood appreciation developed into kodo — the "way of incense" — a formal ceremony analogous to the tea ceremony. The "Royal" in the name reflects this centuries-long association between oud and wealth across multiple cultures.
Where This Sits in the Range
Oud Royal is the heavyweight of the collection. On a spectrum from light to dark, it sits at the dark end alongside Patchouli and 7 Archangels, with Copal White and Palo Santo with Sandalwood at the other extreme. It is also the most "perfumey" of the range — the scent profile is closer to a niche fragrance than to traditional Indian temple incense. Customers who are into perfume, home fragrance, or Middle Eastern culture may respond to this one more than to the spiritual or wellness-themed options.
Gift-Ready
The "Royal" positioning and the luxurious scent make this feel like a more elevated gift than the price suggests. It is one of the few incense fragrances that appeals to people who do not typically buy incense — the oud association crosses over into perfume, home fragrance, and lifestyle territory. Good for fragrance enthusiasts and for anyone who appreciates rich, complex scents. Pairs well with a brass burner or