Part of our Amber Fragrance Family guide.
Ambergris smells warm, salty, and animalic — a soft, marine, faintly sweet muskiness with a mineral, sun-on-skin quality that is utterly unlike the sweet “amber” it is so often confused with. One of the rarest and most storied materials in all of perfumery, it is produced by sperm whales, aged for years at sea, and prized for the glowing, skin-like radiance it lends a fragrance.
What Is Ambergris?
Ambergris is a waxy substance that forms in the digestive system of sperm whales, thought to protect the gut from the sharp beaks of the squid they eat. Once expelled, it floats and weathers on the open ocean for years, slowly transforming from a foul-smelling lump into a fragrant, sought-after material sometimes called “floating gold.” It is rare, expensive, and legally restricted, so most modern fragrances rely on synthetic stand-ins like ambroxan.
What Does Ambergris Smell Like?
Fresh ambergris smells unpleasant and marine-fecal, but well-aged ambergris is something else entirely: sweet, salty, and musky, with a warm animalic depth and a soft, mineral, sea-breeze-on-skin quality. It is subtle but incredibly radiant and long-lasting, which is why perfumers have always prized it as a fixative and as a source of sensual, skin-like warmth. Think of it less as a bold note and more as a glow that makes everything around it feel richer.
Ambergris vs Amber vs Ambroxan
The three are constantly mixed up. Here is the short version — for the wider picture, see our guide to what amber smells like.
| Amber | Ambergris | Ambroxan | |
|---|---|---|---|
| What it is | A constructed accord (blend of resins) | A natural waxy substance | A single synthetic molecule |
| Origin | Plant resins — labdanum, benzoin, vanilla | Sperm whale, aged at sea | Synthesized (originally from clary sage) |
| Smells like | Warm, sweet, resinous, balsamic | Salty, animalic, marine | Clean, woody, slightly salty |
| Animal origin? | No | Yes (now usually synthetic) | No |
“It was created around ambergris, an animal note embellished by other woody, hesperidized, spicy and musky notes. It was a very innovative perfume at the time.”
Nathalie Feisthauer, perfumer (on Hermès Eau des Merveilles), in her Everfumed interview
Fragrances Built on Ambergris
| Fragrance | The ambergris connection |
|---|---|
| Hermès Eau des Merveilles | Famously built around an ambergris accord (Nathalie Feisthauer, 2004) |
| Creed Aventus | Uses an ambergris accord in its rich, smoky base |
| Most modern “ambergris” scents | Rely on synthetic ambroxan rather than the rare, restricted material |
Ambergris FAQ
Does ambergris really come from whales?
Yes. Ambergris forms in the digestive system of sperm whales, most likely to protect the gut from the sharp beaks of the squid they eat. It is expelled into the ocean, where it drifts and ages for years — which is why it is often called “floating gold.”
Is ambergris the same as amber?
No, and this is the biggest source of confusion in fragrance. Amber is a sweet, resinous accord built from plant resins; ambergris is a salty, animalic material from whales. They smell almost nothing alike.
Is ambergris legal?
It depends on the country. Some, such as the United States, ban it because sperm whales are protected; others, like the UK and France, allow beach-found ambergris to be traded. Because of the legal and ethical complications, most modern perfumery uses synthetic substitutes such as ambroxan.
Why is ambergris so expensive?
It is extraordinarily rare — only some sperm whales produce it, it must age at sea for years to smell good, and trade is legally restricted in many places. Genuine, well-aged ambergris can be worth more than its weight in gold.
Larissa is the founder of Everfumed which she started based on her love of fragrances and perfumery. She's worked in the beauty and fragrance industry for 15+ years starting in New York with Coty designer fragrances such as Calvin Klein, Vera Wang, Marc Jacobs, and Cerruti.

