---
title: "Understanding Oud Oil Grades: A vs AA vs AAA — What You're Really Paying For"
slug: oud-oil-grades-guide
date: 2026-03-21
author: Woudya
type: public_content
review: none
category: education
tags: [oud oil, grading, quality, agarwood, guide]
description: "A practical guide to oud oil grades. What separates A-grade from AAA, how distillation and wood quality affect the final product, and what to look for when buying."
---
Understanding Oud Oil Grades: A vs AA vs AAA | Woudya Journal
Understanding Oud Oil Grades: A vs AA vs AAA
By Woudya · March 2026 · 5 min read
If you've browsed oud oil listings, you've seen the alphabet soup: A, AA, AAA, Super, Triple Super. The grading looks precise. The reality is messier. There is no universal standard — no ISO certification, no regulatory body. Every distiller and vendor grades differently.
That said, the grades do mean something. They reflect real differences in raw material, process, and result. Here's what actually separates them.
What Determines Grade
Three factors drive oud oil quality more than anything else:
- Wood quality (resin content). Agarwood forms when Aquilaria trees respond to infection — usually fungal — by producing a dark, aromatic resin. The higher the resin saturation in the wood, the richer the oil. Wild trees that have been infected for decades produce the most resinous heartwood. Cultivated trees, typically inoculated and harvested within 5–8 years, produce lighter resin profiles.
- Distillation method. Traditional hydro-distillation (soaking + steam) is the baseline. The soak duration matters enormously — weeks of fermentation develop complexity. Modern CO₂ extraction and molecular distillation can isolate specific compounds but often lose the rounded character of traditional methods.
- Region of origin. Assam and Manipur (India) produce the classic "Hindi" profile — deep, animalic, barnyard. Cambodian oud tends sweeter and fruitier. Kalimantan (Borneo) sits in the middle: woody, rich, slightly sweet. Malaysian oud often leans green and fresh. Each origin has its own grading culture.
The Grades, Decoded
| Grade |
Wood Source |
Scent Profile |
Longevity |
Price Range (per tola ~12ml) |
| A |
Cultivated or young wild. Moderate resin. Often plantation-grown (5–10 years). |
Clean, woody, lighter. Less layered. Can have a slight sharpness from shorter fermentation. |
4–8 hours on skin |
$80–$250 |
| AA |
Mature wild or high-quality cultivated. Good resin saturation. Selected heartwood pieces. |
Fuller, more complex. Distinct origin character emerges (the fruity Cambodian note, the earthy Hindi depth). Smoother transitions. |
8–14 hours |
$250–$800 |
| AAA |
Premium wild-harvested. Old-growth trees with deep, mature infections. Sinking-grade wood (resin density so high the chips sink in water). |
Exceptionally layered. Opens with one character, evolves over hours into something different. Animalic, sweet, or medicinal depending on origin — but always complex. No harshness. |
12–24+ hours |
$800–$3,000+ |
| Super / Triple Super |
The rarest. Museum-quality wild agarwood, often decades of natural infection. Tiny yields. |
Transcendent — if you believe the marketing. In practice, diminishing returns above AAA for most people. The difference is real but subtle. |
24+ hours |
$3,000–$10,000+ |
A note on honesty: These price ranges are indicative. The oud market is notoriously opaque. A "AAA" from one vendor might be "AA" from another. The grade is the vendor's word — your nose is the real judge.
What Grade Should You Buy?
It depends on what you're doing with it:
- For daily wear or layering with perfume: A-grade works. Clean, pleasant, won't overwhelm. Good entry point to understand what oud actually smells like beyond synthetic imitations.
- For oud appreciation or special occasions: AA is the sweet spot. You get genuine complexity and origin character without paying collector prices. This is where most enthusiasts live.
- For collectors and connoisseurs: AAA. The depth is undeniable. One drop tells a story. But you need trained appreciation to justify the price — like buying a grand cru when you're still learning about wine.
Red Flags When Buying
- "Pure oud" under $50/tola. At those prices, it's diluted, synthetic, or a different oil entirely. Real oud distillation is expensive — yields are tiny (often less than 1% of wood weight).
- No origin specified. If a vendor says "AAA oud oil" without telling you where the wood came from, they're hiding something. Origin is half the story.
- Uniform color across grades. Higher grades are typically darker (more resin = darker oil), though this varies by distillation method. If A and AAA look identical, question it.
- "Aged 20 years." Aging can improve oud oil, but unverifiable age claims are the oldest trick in the book. Focus on the smell, not the story.
Our Approach at Woudya
We source from Kalimantan, Borneo — one of the most respected oud-producing regions in Southeast Asia. We offer three tiers (A, AA, AAA) because the differences are real and worth understanding. But we don't romanticize it. We tell you exactly what you're getting: the origin, the grade, the distillation. Your nose decides the rest.
Browse our oud oil collection to see the range.