
Oud is everywhere in American fragrance culture right now — and yet most American consumers have never encountered the real thing. They've smelled "oud" at a department store counter: usually a synthetic approximation blended with musks and florals, polished for Western palates. It smells fine. It smells nothing like actual agarwood.
If you're curious about the genuine article, this guide is for you. We'll cover what agarwood is, why it costs what it costs, how grading works, what forms to buy, what red flags to watch for, and how to get started without overspending or getting burned.
Why Oud Is Having a Moment in America Right Now
North America's agarwood chips market was valued at $13.29 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach $25.96 billion by 2034 — a CAGR of 7.70% (Precedence Research, 2025). That's not driven by niche collectors. It reflects a genuine mainstream shift.
Several forces are converging simultaneously:
- The niche fragrance boom: Niche fragrance houses now account for 60% of premium oud perfume sales globally, and e-commerce for oud grew from 17% of sales in 2020 to 28.7% in 2025. American consumers are shopping online for authentic, complex scents they can't find in a mall.
- Wellness culture: As aromatherapy and mindfulness practices continue to mainstream, consumers seek materials with documented therapeutic properties. Agarwood's anti-inflammatory, anxiolytic, and sleep-improving effects are now supported by peer-reviewed research published in PMC and Oxford's ORA database (2022–2025).
- Multicultural influence: Arab, South Asian, Southeast Asian, and Chinese diaspora communities have carried agarwood traditions to the US for decades. As these communities grow and their cultural exports gain wider visibility, oud follows naturally.
- Sustainability values: Over 52% of US consumers now prioritize eco-conscious sourcing in luxury purchases. Traceable, plantation-grown agarwood aligns with those values in ways that anonymous department store bottles do not.
Understanding Agarwood: The Essentials
Agarwood forms inside Aquilaria trees when the heartwood becomes infected with a specific fungal pathogen. The tree's immune response produces a dark, aromatic resin that gradually saturates the wood over years or decades. That resin is what makes agarwood fragrant, extraordinarily dense, and valuable.
In Chinese, it's called chénxiāng — "sinking incense." In Arabic, oud or oudh. In Sanskrit, agaru. Every major civilization in Asia has a name for it because every major civilization in Asia valued it for millennia. It is not a trend. It is one of the oldest luxury materials in human history.
Fewer than 10% of wild Aquilaria trees produce agarwood naturally. The process is slow, unpredictable, and cannot be fully replicated on demand — which is why the rarest grades can command prices higher than gold by weight.
The Grading Systems (and Why They Matter for Your Purchase)
There is no single universal agarwood grading standard, and this is one of the most confusing aspects for new buyers. You'll encounter several overlapping systems:
The Alphabetic System
The most common grading sequence runs: C → B → AB → A → AA → AAA, with AAA representing the highest resin concentration and complexity. Some vendors extend this with "Super AAA" or "Special Grade" designations — treat those with healthy skepticism unless you can independently verify resin content through a reputable source.
The Water Test / Sinking Grades
One of the oldest quality tests in the book: genuine high-resin agarwood is dense enough to sink in water. Grading by this method typically runs:
- Regular: floats at the surface
- Semi-Sinking: partially submerged, partially floating
- Half Sinking: suspended mid-water
- Sinking: sinks slowly to the bottom
- Fast Sinking / Underwater: the premium grades — immediate and complete immersion
Sinking-grade agarwood is genuinely rare and expensive. If a vendor is offering "sinking grade" chips at $20 for 10 grams, it isn't sinking grade. Move on.
Origin-Based Quality
Region significantly affects scent profile — and price. Vietnamese agarwood (especially from Nha Trang and Khánh Hòa) is widely considered the world's finest: honeyed, layered, with resinous depth that evolves over a burn. Cambodian wood is sweeter and fruitier. Indian Assam carries a dark, balsamic, almost medicinal intensity. Chinese Aquilaria sinensis — particularly from Maoming in Guangdong — offers a distinctly creamy, refined character deeply rooted in the classical Chinese cultural tradition.

What Forms Can You Buy?
Agarwood Chips (Raw Wood)
The most traditional and respected form. Chips are heated on an electric burner or over Japanese charcoal in a kōro, releasing fragrance slowly and in layers. This is the connoisseur's choice — you control the heat intensity, the experience, the pace. It rewards patience. Price range: $10–$1,000+ per 10 grams depending on grade and origin.
Agarwood Incense Sticks and Coils
More accessible for everyday use and no special equipment required. Good quality sticks blend genuine agarwood powder with a natural binder, offering a continuous, measured burn. Premium coils can burn for 4 hours or more. Look for products where agarwood is listed as a primary ingredient — not buried under "fragrance" or "scent" as a synthetic approximation.
Oud Oil (Agarwood Essential Oil)
Steam-distilled from agarwood chips, oud oil is extraordinarily concentrated. A single drop placed on warm skin or clothing can last all day. Pure oud oil carries no synthetic additives and is sold in 1ml to 12ml vials. Prices range from $100 to $30,000+ per ounce for the rarest single-origin grades. Most "oud oil" available in the US at low price points is heavily diluted or entirely synthetic. If the price seems too good, it is.

Agarwood Incense Burners (Mabkhara)
If you're burning chips, a quality burner matters. Traditional Arabic brass mabkhara and Japanese kōro both work beautifully. Electric agarwood burners — with precise temperature control and no charcoal required — are increasingly popular with US buyers for convenience and consistency.

Red Flags: How to Spot Fake or Low-Quality Agarwood
The market has significant counterfeiting and adulteration problems, particularly online. Here's what to watch for before you spend:
- Harsh, acrid smell when burned: Genuine agarwood produces smooth, complex, evolving smoke. Harsh, chemical, or quickly dissipating smoke points to synthetic additives or artificially dyed wood with no natural resin content.
- Perfectly uniform dark appearance: Real agarwood has irregular dark streaking or patches where resin has accumulated naturally. Wood that looks uniformly and artificially darkened throughout the piece is suspect.
- Suspiciously low prices: Premium or sinking-grade chips at $5 for 10 grams are not commercially possible given raw material costs. Low prices almost always mean low — or zero — natural resin content.
- No provenance information: Legitimate sellers can tell you the country of origin, the species, and ideally the region or plantation. Vague "oud" with no traceable provenance is a significant red flag.
- CITES compliance gap: For any significant purchase, confirm the seller can provide documentation of legal, sustainable sourcing. All international agarwood trade is regulated under CITES Appendix II — a reputable seller will have no hesitation providing this.
What Should You Actually Pay? A 2025 US Price Guide
| Grade / Product | Realistic Price Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Entry-level chips (C/B grade) | $10–$50 / 10g | Beginners, daily burning, exploration |
| Mid-grade chips (A/AA) | $50–$200 / 10g | Regular enthusiasts, quality gifting |
| Premium / sinking grade (AAA) | $200–$1,000+ / 10g | Connoisseurs, collectors, luxury gifting |
| Oud oil (entry to mid) | $100–$500 / 1ml | Personal fragrance, daily wear |
| Oud oil (rare / single-origin) | $500–$5,000+ / 1ml | Investment, serious collection |
| Incense sticks / coils (quality) | $15–$80 / pack | Everyday use, home fragrance, gifting |
Sustainability: Why It Matters When You Buy
This isn't marketing language — it's a material concern. About 70% of global agarwood trade still relies on two threatened species, and wild harvesting of one species exceeded 97% of total traded volume between 2010 and 2020 (ScienceDirect, 2025).
The good news: certified plantation-grown agarwood is a genuine, high-quality alternative. Modern biotechnological induction methods stimulate authentic resin formation in cultivated Aquilaria trees without forest destruction. Responsible vendors source from these plantations and can provide documentation. Ask for it — and if a seller can't provide it, that itself is informative.
Where to Start as an American Buyer
Start small and specific. A 5–10 gram sampler of A-grade chips from a documented single origin — Vietnamese, Cambodian, or Chinese Aquilaria sinensis — costs $50–$100 and gives you a genuine reference point. Burn a small piece, take your time with it, note what you experience. Compare with your next purchase from a different origin.
The learning curve is a feature, not a bug. Every serious oud collector started exactly where you're standing now.
SilkwayOud's collection covers the full range — from entry-level chips and everyday incense sticks to sinking-grade rarities and pure oud oils — all with documented provenance and transparent grading. If you're not sure where to start, our team is available to guide you to the right entry point for your budget and curiosity.
References
- Precedence Research — Agarwood Chips Market Size, Share & Forecast 2025–2034
- ScienceDirect — Global Agarwood Trade and Conservation Priorities (2025)
- PMC9104417 — Therapeutic Potential of Agarwood (2022)
- CITES CoP20 — Agarwood Trade Regulations and Conservation
- Just Oud — Agarwood Grades and Grading Guide
- OudDict Community — Guide to Buying Agarwood Chips