Bengaluru’s attar lanes do not judge. They adapt. Alongside rare oils and carefully distilled blends, familiar interpretations and inspired replicas sit on the same shelves. Attars and perfumes demand caution. What smells extraordinary on one person can fall flat — or worse, repel — on another. Skin chemistry, weather, heat, time, and restraint all matter. Chosen well, a fragrance can make you smell like a million dollars. Chosen poorly, it can push people miles away. These lanes understand the difference.This walk begins between Commercial Street and Ibrahim Sahib Street. Within a kilometre, the city shifts register. The noise remains, but the smell changes. Everyday shops begin to feel like portals from a fantasy world — jewel-toned bottles, golden lids, soft lighting, drifting incense. This is attar territory.Attar in India did not arrive as a trend. It travelled through Islamic and Mughal perfumery, shaped by steam distillation, refined in Kannauj, anchored by Mysuru sandalwood, and enriched by oud grown in the Northeast. Bengaluru sat in the middle — as a natural trading and retail bridge. That geography built these lanes. Family businesses took root. Methods stayed stubborn even as bottles modernised. Some houses look outward; others sell mostly to those who already know. All of it hidden in plain sight. From exoctic forests to Bengaluru’s shelvesShams Al Oudh has been around since 2009, and it shows in the calm way the shop operates. Partner Roohul Ameen explains oud the way one explains something deeply respected — slowly, structurally, without theatre. Some oils here are manufactured in-house, supported by a distillation unit in Assam, close to India’s Aquilaria trees. The rest of the shelf travels well: Spain, France, Switzerland, Germany, Turkey. For first-time buyers, he often begins with sandalwood. “Same logic, different tree,” he says. He moves easily across geographies — Aquilaria in India, Gyrinops walla in Sri Lanka, Kynam in Vietnam and China — and just as comfortably across numbers. Oud wood can cost anywhere between Rs 10,000 and Rs 5 lakh for 100 grams. Three millilitres of oil can equal a month’s rent in our city. The Gulf buys & Bengaluru learns about it.Custom blends for those who already know their scentsA family business since 1958, IRS Perfumes specialises in customised oils. You describe what you want; they build it. The perfumes are alcohol-free and designed to stay on skin well past twenty-four hours. Md Jabeer Mohinuddin, Marketing and Sales Head, is direct about fundamentals. “Oud is expensive because agarwood grows slowly and unpredictably. Good oud oil starts around Rs 7,500 for ten millilitres. Real attar lasts. Dilute it and longevity drops. Add alcohol and it disappears,” he explains. The authenticity, he says, reveals itself over time – only serious users know about it. A whiff for every wallet
- Entry-level attars start at ₹200 for 3 ml
- Natural attars begin around ₹500 for 3 ml
- Standard attars are priced from ₹300 for 10 ml
- Premium oud oils can go up to ₹7,500 for 10 ml, depending on quality
Tested on skin, air and patienceStarted in 2022 in Kammanahalli and now present on Commercial Street, IKONIC sources oud from Dubai and sandalwood from India. While it maintains secrecy around its original mixes, some in-house creations do surface — Smokey Leather Oud, Magic, Zain Mix, XS Night, Invictuo, Moroccan Rose, Candy Love. “What sets us apart is process. We mix, test, step out, and observe — how it smells indoors and outdoors, in heat and humidity, how it reacts to skin and air over time. Only then does a blend earn its place. Very few of these concoctions are available here compared to others,” says a spokesperson at the store.
Real attar lasts. Dilute it and longevity drops. Add alcohol and it disappears. The authenticity, reveals itself over time
– Md Jabeer Mohinuddin of IRS Perfumes
A legacy to understand and senseFounded in the 1950s by Haji Ajmal Ali, who moved from rice farming in Assam to oud oil, Ajmal Perfumes grew steadily from forest trade to global retail. Ajmal can be credited with popularising attars and Middle Eastern perfumes among the masses, helped by aggressive marketing and a tightly curated catalogue that balances accessibility with tradition. “Today, we operate hundreds of outlets across more than forty-five countries. Our bestsellers include Amber Wood, Song of Oud, Aristocrat, Aurum, and Blu. In oil form, 1001 Nights, Royal Two, Oudh Mukhallat, Mizyaan, and Musk Rose,” says a spokesperson.
Familiar smells such as biryani, milk, ghee and even Oreo are memory triggers, not stunts. NRIs recognise them instantly. Foreigners lean in. Indians smile before they sniff
– Kareem, CEO of Al Kareem Attars
Biryani, ghee and childhood in bottlesWalking in feels less like entering a shop and more like stepping into Dexter’s laboratory for perfume. Bottles, vials, oils everywhere. Lab coats. Test tubes. Beakers. Droppers. Everything is designed with one goal: to make you smell good. Kareem, the CEO, describes his journey as self-made. He also credits God. “Over sixteen years at Al Kareem Attars, French and Middle Eastern imports share space with natural oils from Kannauj,” says Kareem, who then adds some unexpected notes, by bringing in familiar smells of biryani, milk, ghee and even Oreo. These fragrances are memory triggers, not stunts. NRIs recognise them instantly. Foreigners lean in. Indians smile before they sniff. Customers mix them with florals and woods, turning kitchens, train journeys, and childhood into wearable jokes.
