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Sandalwood and Santal Candles: The Same Wood, a Dozen Interpretations
Sandalwood and Santal Candles: Scent, Origin, and How to Choose
A sandalwood candle smells warm, dry, and creamy, closer to soft wood and skin than to anything sweet or floral. Pure sandalwood, the kind distilled from Santalum album, carries a milky, almost meditative smoothness with a faint resinous edge. Blended sandalwood candles layer that base with amber for warmth, citrus for lift, or musk for a rounder, cozier finish. Unlike sharper woods such as cedar or pine, sandalwood reads gentle and long-lasting, which is why it anchors so many luxury fragrances and tends to fill a room slowly rather than all at once.
Yes. Santal is the French word for sandalwood, so a santal candle and a sandalwood candle describe the same core ingredient. The distinction is mostly marketing and origin: French and French-influenced houses tend to label their candles santal, while English-language and American brands say sandalwood. At Candle Delirium we shelve them together for exactly that reason. The one nuance worth knowing is that santal sometimes signals a blended, perfume-style wood rather than a pure single-note, but there is no rule, and you should always read the actual scent notes rather than trusting the name.
The closest candle to Le Labo Santal 33 that we carry is Maison Louis Marie No. 04 Bois de Balincourt ($40), with our own Delirium Suede & Smoke ($58) for the smoky-leather side and Delirium Santal Max ($58) for the dry-wood heart. Santal 33 is a perfume, not a candle, so the real answer is a ranked set of alternatives, which we scored by closeness in our full Le Labo Santal 33 alternatives ranking at /blogs/luxury-candles/what-candle-smells-like-le-labo-santal-33.
Sandalwood candles cost more because genuine sandalwood is one of the most expensive raw materials in fragrance. Indian sandalwood, Santalum album, was harvested so heavily that it is now listed as vulnerable on the IUCN Red List, and its export from India is tightly restricted, which pushed the price of the pure oil into the hundreds of dollars per kilogram. Many candles labeled sandalwood therefore use Australian sandalwood, a more sustainable cousin, or a blend of natural and synthetic santal molecules to keep the scent affordable. When a sandalwood candle is genuinely cheap, the wood is almost always reconstructed rather than distilled, which is not a flaw, just a different formula.







