|
HS Code |
946089 |
| Name | Jasmine Oil |
| Botanical Source | Jasminum officinale |
| Appearance | pale yellow to golden brown |
| Aroma | sweet, floral, exotic |
| Extraction Method | solvent extraction or steam distillation |
| Main Components | benzyl acetate, linalool, indole, benzyl alcohol |
| Solubility | soluble in alcohol and oils, insoluble in water |
| Common Uses | perfumery, aromatherapy, skincare |
| Origin | primarily India, Egypt, Morocco |
| Shelf Life | 2-3 years |
| Density | 0.930 – 0.980 g/cm³ |
| Refractive Index | 1.470 – 1.510 |
| Flash Point | greater than 93°C |
| Color | light yellow to brownish |
| Storage Conditions | cool, dark place, tightly sealed |
As an accredited Jasmine Oil factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.
| Packing | Jasmine Oil is packaged in a 100 ml amber glass bottle with a dropper cap, labeled for fragrance and aromatherapy use. |
| Shipping | Jasmine Oil should be shipped in tightly sealed, leak-proof containers made of glass or compatible plastic to prevent contamination or evaporation. Store and transport it in cool, dry conditions, away from direct sunlight and ignition sources. Ensure compliance with local and international regulations for shipping essential oils and flammable liquids. |
| Storage | Jasmine oil should be stored in tightly sealed, amber-colored glass containers to protect it from light and air exposure. Keep in a cool, dry, and well-ventilated area away from heat sources, open flames, and incompatible materials. Ensure the storage area is secure, labeled appropriately, and inaccessible to unauthorized personnel. Avoid storing near oxidizing agents or strong acids. |
|
Purity 99%: Jasmine Oil with purity 99% is used in high-quality perfumery applications, where it ensures consistent fragrance profile and minimal impurities. Viscosity 45 cP: Jasmine Oil with viscosity 45 cP is used in premium cosmetic formulations, where it facilitates optimal skin absorption and spreadability. Flash Point 75°C: Jasmine Oil with a flash point of 75°C is used in aromatherapy diffusers, where it provides enhanced safety during thermal dispersion. Refractive Index 1.478: Jasmine Oil with refractive index 1.478 is used in essential oil blends for spa treatments, where it guarantees blend compatibility and product clarity. Acid Value < 3 mg KOH/g: Jasmine Oil with acid value less than 3 mg KOH/g is used in skincare emulsions, where it minimizes formulation instability and skin irritation. Stability Temperature 25°C–40°C: Jasmine Oil with a stability temperature range of 25°C–40°C is used in ambient storage conditions, where it maintains aroma integrity and chemical composition. Specific Gravity 0.950–0.980: Jasmine Oil with specific gravity 0.950–0.980 is used in pharmaceutical aromatics, where it ensures accurate dosing and formulation uniformity. |
Competitive Jasmine Oil prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.
For samples, pricing, or more information, please call us at +8615371019725 or mail to admin@sinochem-nanjing.com.
We will respond to you as soon as possible.
Tel: +8615371019725
Email: admin@sinochem-nanjing.com
Flexible payment, competitive price, premium service - Inquire now!
From decades inside the chemical manufacturing world, every product on our line tells a story built on raw material selection, process rigor, and genuine know-how. Our Jasmine Oil carries the same hallmark. The demand outpaces many other floral oils and brings new challenges every season—weather, raw availability, storage, and quality control keep us honest. Jasmine flowers open at night, so collection happens in pre-dawn hours, and every worker’s hand influences the final aroma. We source straight from small growers who swear by the hand-picking method, because bruised blossoms throw the chemistry off long before distillation starts. On the factory floor, our process leans on direct experience and hard-earned trial and error.
We produce Jasmine Oil under our dedicated JMO-EX/22 line. Each batch leaves our plant after columns of in-house checks that shape both aroma and chemical profile toward industry needs. Our standard output reaches a minimum content of methyl jasmonate and benzyl acetate—key aroma compounds—measured on GC-MS with proven methods. Average color reflects the pale yellow standard expected by cosmetics and fragrance specialists, but we avoid bleaching or artificial lightening to protect the delicate volatiles. For applications that require extreme purity, a secondary purification process removes trace waxes and pigments without resorting to harsh solvents; the resulting oil offers a cleaner dry-down and more stable scent in finished formulas. We pack every shipment in inert glass or stainless drums sealed with nitrogen headspace, sparing the oil from air and keeping oxidation at bay for over a year after manufacture if stored correctly.
Jasmine Oil has shaped the perfume trade for centuries, with roots in countless traditions from the Mediterranean to South Asia. Over the years, we have partnered with perfumers blending this extract into high-end fragrances, candle makers searching for an authentic top note, and cosmetic labs formulating lotions with subtle floral undertones. Soap manufacturers seek the oil for its stability in both cold and hot process bases, while aromatherapy specialists prioritise purity and batch documentation. Our team handles orders that run from a few kilos for niche perfumers to full in-plant tanker supply for large-scale cosmetic operations. Some customers grew tired of oils stripped in multi-ton refineries—our batches capture more of jasmine’s raw complexity because we run equipment scaled for precision, not volume.
A lot of jasmine fragrance oil on the market comes from synthetic blends. You can spot those easily in the lab—linalool ratios skew too high, or there’s an odd linear fade. Working with genuine flower extract is a different exercise. We stand with extraction because it keeps trace compounds that make the difference between a flat, generic scent and the rich, layered profile our customers look for. Our team refuses additives that dilute or fix aroma artificially. Pesticide and alloy residues from substandard processing show up clear in independent tests; we’ve zero tolerance for that, so rigorous raw material inspection remains our priority before anything enters the plant.
Jasmine flowers are fussy about the soil and climate, and small factors—morning humidity, harvest intervals—shift the aroma balance. Over fifty percent of local jasmine flowers lose their peak aroma by noon. Unlike many fragrance factories that process flowers after long transports, we keep our collection to within hours of flower opening, so every vat receives blossoms at their prime. In cold weather seasons when natural oil yield dips, we slow throughput instead of cutting quality or blending with lower-grade oils, a decision that sometimes strains short-term output but preserves customer trust.
Our extraction teams operate on two lines: solvent extraction for absolute grade and steam distillation for traditional essential oil. The two products look similar but behave differently in finished applications. The absolute carries a heavier, rounder note closer to fresh petals, while essential oil leans cleaner and less indolic. For clients working with natural perfumery or those exporting to markets with distinct ingredient rules, this distinction impacts product registration, labeling, and performance.
Most off-the-shelf jasmine fragrance comes cut with diluents. We never stretch our output using dipropylene glycol, alcohol, or cheap carrier oils. Everything leaving our site ships as undiluted jasmine extract—either absolute or essential grade—leaving creative blending squarely in the hands of the customer. This pure composition lets formulators hit desired aroma strength using less oil, avoiding reformulation headaches tied to variable carrier-based products.
Jasmine’s subtle chemistry doesn’t survive careless handling, so the manufacturing environment matters as much as raw material source. Air temperature, humidity, and even light exposure all show up in batch testing. Because contamination risk climbs fast in floral extracts, our lines run positive-pressure air filtration and crew access gets restricted during active production. Each production zone receives real-time data monitoring so we spot problems before they affect an entire run. Trained workers log cleanliness checks and material handling events by QR code to preserve accountability.
For years, we have observed that certain technical standards miss practical details. Oil acidity can spike if storage drums sit too long, so we condition stainless steel tanks and cycle inventory on a tight schedule. Experience tells us that jasmine is a living product, changing subtly even after extraction. Our technical staff checks each batch monthly for aroma fade, wax precipitation, and aldehyde shifts, so customers can rely on material that behaves the same month to month.
End users tell us that small differences in jasmine profile shape overall product success much more than in other florals. Many first-time buyers who tried cheaper “jasmine” in bulk find the scent fades or throws off unwanted herbal notes after only weeks on the shelf. Experienced buyers often run comparative solubility or fixative tests before committing to a supplier. In practical terms, pure jasmine oil anchors top notes in fine fragrance formulas and provides a familiar warmth in spa blends. Over the last decade, wellness brands have come to us after encountering regulatory questions or batch recalls—our full chain of custody gives brand owners peace of mind that synthetic or pesticide contamination won’t touch their label.
Our routine interaction with regulatory agencies over REACH and IFRA compliance puts us ahead of the curve. Tight traceability for each drum, coupled with detailed test records, meets scrutiny from both local regulators and global brand partners. Sometimes policy shifts demand ingredient re-evaluation; our technical team updates documentation and batch data in days rather than weeks to stay nimble. This kind of responsiveness grew out of years solving customer problems, not out of a rulebook.
Jasmine Oil owes its high price partly to the impossibility of mechanization—not many machines can harvest a flower as delicate as jasmine without spoilage. Raw yield per hectare stays low, so quality fluctuates with rainfall, temperature, and pest pressure. Even in productive years, untrained workers might bruise blossoms or compress harvest bags—simple mistakes that ruin an entire extraction vat with off notes or haze. Our operations involve regular field visits to train local pickers, update them on optimal harvest techniques, and offer bonuses for damage-free loads. That on-site engagement helped us slash reject rates from fifteen percent to below five percent over the last five years.
Another wrinkle comes from industry pressure for year-round supply. Jasmine fields rest part of the year, and oil stocks often run tight just as fragrance labs ramp up for new launches. We bridge this gap using cold storage for fresh flowers and by running small-batch extractions to fill specialty orders. Some rivals meet demand by bulking jasmine with other white floral oils—customers later discover their finished products fail GC fingerprinting, leading to reformulation and relabeling costs. Our batch-pure approach means you get only what the label says, at consistent quality, every time.
Any chemical producer can talk about technical parameters, but only those in the trenches understand how small details impact finished products. Over the years, many batch problems trace to problems upstream—immature or overripe flowers, inconsistent harvest intervals, or incorrect drum preparation. Seeing this, we placed more emphasis on supplier partnerships and equipment maintenance than on speeding up any one part of the line. A blocked filter left unchecked can tip a perfect run into a rejected one; a ten-minute harvest delay on a humid morning can flatten peak aroma in a day’s work. Years of troubleshooting have honed our process so problems get caught before material ships.
Direct engagement with commercial fragrance houses, personal care manufacturers, and R&D labs sharpened our senses. Their feedback shaped everything from selective distillation pressure adjustments to more robust drum linings that guard against trace metal interference—small gains repeated over thousands of liters add up. Increasingly, brand owners want more than just consistent supply. They expect transparency—proof that products stay true to natural origin claims, test clean for contaminants, and perform in demanding applications from luxury skincare to industrial use. Only hands-on manufacturers appreciate fully the demanding chain of decisions that connects field, plant, and customer expectations.
Jasmine Oil shares shelf space with other floral oils—rose, tuberose, ylang ylang—and synthetic jasmine blends. The genuine extract stands apart on aroma richness and sheer complexity. Unlike ylang ylang, jasmine doesn't carry the same spicy or banana notes; rose gives a sharper, more astringent top. Tuberose opens bolder but lacks jasmine’s sheer subtlety. Synthetics deliver price savings but miss the small molecular traces that shape real jasmine’s “living” impression. Customers using our oil often highlight longevity and “real flower” presence as distinguishing points, even at parts-per-thousand levels in a formula.
One persistent challenge for buyers involves distinguishing between absolute, essential oil, and “jasmine fragrance oil” (which is often only synthetic). Each serves a place in formulation, but only genuine Jasmine Oil, produced without carrier or synthetic adjuncts, delivers not just scent, but performance in both regulatory and consumer expectation. It costs more, takes longer to produce, and demands stricter handling—but it’s the only way to guarantee both integrity and impact in high-value blends.
We have seen firsthand the pressures on jasmine production—from farm labor issues to market volatility caused by weather or shifts in global demand. Last decade has forced chemical manufacturers to reckon with both their supply chain practices and their impact on farming communities. In response, we invest in programs that raise field worker wages, rotate harvest fields to protect soil health, and fund training that helps new growers enter the supply chain. Traceability isn't just a matter of compliance; it’s also about recognizing the chain of people who enable production of an oil as rare—and as valued—as jasmine.
Jasmine is one of those rare ingredients that resists standardization. Year after year, we see raw oil batches that shift in nuance with the weather, the soil, and the hands that pick them. Yet the standard of quality we chase—the unmistakable depth and clarity of real jasmine—rests as much on lived history as on lab analysis. Our commitment to this standard ties us not just to the present moment, but to a longer tradition of craftsmanship that refuses to trade short-term gain for lasting value.
We have learned over time that the easiest way to waste Jasmine Oil is by pairing it with the wrong base or storing it carelessly. Detailed technical support helps our customers avoid pitfalls. Each order comes matched with expert advice: how to blend to retain the top notes, which fixatives to test for longevity, and how to store oil for batch-to-batch aroma consistency. We encourage customers to sample small before scaling up, to ensure compatibility with their formula base and market regulations. Years in the field showed us that no two customers use Jasmine Oil quite the same way, so we built flexibility—without sacrificing traceability—into our customer support model.
Transportation and storage remain critical. Jasmine Oil’s volatile components degrade with heat or prolonged light exposure. Our facility packs every drum cool, logs transit times, and includes recommended storage specs. Once with the buyer, it deserves a cool, dark spot and tightly sealed closures. Oxygen and heat draw down both aroma life and technical stability. Every batch remains fully backed with test records—retained for years, not months—and our technical team keeps an open ear for customer performance feedback long after shipment.
Working with Jasmine Oil is not fast, and it resists shortcuts. Each step—from picking to extraction to shipment—draws on layered experience earned over decades. Chemical manufacturing often tempts operators with faster throughput or clever blends, but nothing substitutes for hands-on familiarity with raw flowers, careful attention in the processing line, and an eye for post-extraction changes with time. Jasmine Oil is, above all, a product whose quality depends on respect for the process and for the people who shape it, from farm to factory to the hands of the end user.