Sandalwood Oil

Sandalwood oil is the fragrant essential oil distilled from the heartwood of the sandalwood tree — most famously Santalum album, the Indian or "true" sandalwood prized for centuries in perfume, incense, and traditional medicine. A hundred years ago, American doctors didn't think of it as a perfume ingredient at all: in the 1926 U.S. Dispensatory it was a working medicine, given by mouth as a "urinary antiseptic" for gonorrhea, bladder infections, and chronic bronchitis. That history is real, and it tells us something true about why the oil was tried. But the modern picture is more honest and more limited: sandalwood's main compound, santalol, does show antibacterial and anti-inflammatory activity in the laboratory, and there is genuine new interest in it for skin and aromatherapy — yet it is not a treatment for gonorrhea, urinary tract infections, or any serious infection today. Those need antibiotics. This page walks through what doctors believed in 1926, what sandalwood oil actually is, where the science is solid versus thin, and the safety points the old enthusiasm left out.


Table of Contents

  1. Historical Medical Use (the 1926 U.S. Dispensatory)
  2. What Sandalwood Oil Actually Is
  3. Antibacterial & Urinary History, Reframed
  4. Why It Is Not a Treatment for Gonorrhea or UTIs
  5. Skin, Anti-Inflammatory & Aromatherapy Interest
  6. How Sandalwood Oil Is Used Today
  7. Sustainability & Adulteration
  8. Safety, Cautions & Myths
  9. Key Research Papers
  10. Connections
  11. Featured Videos

Historical Medical Use (the 1926 U.S. Dispensatory)

In the early twentieth century — before penicillin, before sulfa drugs, before any reliable antibiotic existed — doctors had a serious problem: bacterial infections were often untreatable, and they reached for whatever seemed to help. Several aromatic plant oils were given by mouth in the hope that, once absorbed and excreted by the kidneys, they would pass through the urinary tract and disinfect it on the way out. Sandalwood oil (then catalogued under names like Oleum Santali and the related preparation "santal") was one of the most popular of these.

In the 1926 U.S. Dispensatory (Wood & LaWall) and the wider medical literature of the era, sandalwood oil was used:

It is worth saying plainly what is and isn't true here. The history is accurate — these really were standard uses, written into the leading American drug reference of the day, and given by competent physicians doing their best with the tools they had. What was wrong was the underlying assumption that swallowing a fragrant oil could cure an established infection. When effective antibiotics arrived in the 1930s and 1940s, sandalwood oil and the other "balsamic urinary antiseptics" (copaiba, cubeb, and the like) were quickly abandoned for these purposes, because the new drugs actually cured the infections rather than just easing symptoms. The rest of this page explains what modern evidence does and doesn't support.

What Sandalwood Oil Actually Is

Sandalwood oil is a steam-distilled essential oil obtained from the mature heartwood and roots of sandalwood trees — not the leaves or bark. The tree has to be old (often 15 years or more) before the inner heartwood develops enough fragrant oil to be worth harvesting, which is one reason genuine sandalwood is slow-growing and expensive.

The two species that matter commercially are:

What gives sandalwood oil its character — and essentially all of its studied biological activity — is a family of sesquiterpene alcohols called santalols. In high-quality S. album oil, α-santalol and β-santalol together make up roughly 70–90% of the oil; international quality standards for Indian sandalwood oil require a minimum total santalol content (commonly cited around 90% for premium grades). These two molecules are responsible for the deep, soft, woody-balsamic scent and are the compounds researchers test when they study antibacterial, anti-inflammatory, or skin effects. Other minor constituents include santalenes, santyl acetate, and various smaller sesquiterpenoids.

Two practical points follow from this chemistry. First, "sandalwood" products vary enormously: an oil rich in santalol behaves very differently from a cheap "sandalwood fragrance" that may contain little or no real santalol. Second — and this is the part the 1926 doctors couldn't fully appreciate — showing that a purified compound kills bacteria in a dish is a long way from showing that swallowing the whole oil cures a human infection.

Antibacterial & Urinary History, Reframed

So was there anything to the old idea? Partly yes — which is exactly why it's worth being precise rather than simply mocking the past.

In modern laboratory ("in vitro") studies, sandalwood oil and isolated santalols do show measurable activity against a range of microbes. Reviews of Santalum chemistry report antibacterial effects against organisms including Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, and others, as well as antifungal and some antiviral activity, plus anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects in cell and animal models. Recent food-science work has even looked at sandalwood essential oil as a natural antimicrobial to suppress Salmonella enterica on food surfaces, and other groups have shown sandalwood oils are active in the dish against Madurella mycetomatis, the main fungus behind the tropical disease mycetoma. There is also striking laboratory and animal data on antifungal activity relevant to skin and nail organisms.

Notice the pattern: the 1926 physicians weren't hallucinating an effect out of nothing. Sandalwood oil really does have some germ-slowing properties in a test tube, and it really was excreted partly through the urine, so it's understandable that careful clinicians a century ago concluded it "worked" on urinary symptoms — especially when the alternative was nothing at all, and when easing the burning and inflammation could feel like a cure even if the underlying bacteria persisted.

But here is the reframe, and it is the whole point: laboratory antibacterial activity is not the same as curing an infection in a living person. The concentrations that kill bacteria in a dish are often far higher than what safely reaches the bladder after you swallow a capsule; the body dilutes, metabolizes, and clears the compound; and an established infection involves bacteria multiplying faster than a weak antiseptic can suppress them. Modern medicine has a clear standard — controlled clinical trials in actual patients — and sandalwood oil has never met it as a cure for any infection. Its honest status is: a substance with real test-tube antibacterial and anti-inflammatory activity, and a real historical role as a urinary antiseptic, but not a proven treatment for human infection.

Why It Is Not a Treatment for Gonorrhea or UTIs

This deserves its own section because the stakes are high, and because "natural urinary antiseptic" is exactly the kind of phrase that can lead someone to delay real care.

Gonorrhea is a serious, reportable bacterial infection that requires antibiotics — full stop. It is caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae, and current treatment is a specific antibiotic regimen (in the U.S., an injection of ceftriaxone), often with testing and treatment of sexual partners. Untreated gonorrhea can cause pelvic inflammatory disease, infertility, chronic pelvic pain, and can spread through the bloodstream; in newborns it can cause blinding eye infections. To make it worse, N. gonorrhoeae has become increasingly drug-resistant, which is the opposite of a problem you want to manage with a 1926 folk remedy. No essential oil treats gonorrhea. If gonorrhea is suspected, the answer is testing and prescription antibiotics from a clinic — and there are free or low-cost options through public STI clinics in the U.S.

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) also need real treatment. A simple bladder infection is usually cured quickly with a short course of antibiotics. Left untreated, a UTI can climb to the kidneys (pyelonephritis) and even into the bloodstream (urosepsis), which is life-threatening — and warning signs like fever, flank/back pain, vomiting, blood in the urine, or symptoms in pregnancy, in men, in children, or in anyone with diabetes or a catheter mean you should be seen promptly, not self-treating. Sandalwood oil is not a substitute for that care.

None of this means the topic is hopeless or that prevention doesn't matter. For people prone to recurrent UTIs, well-studied, lower-risk strategies exist — good hydration, and for some women, prescription preventive antibiotics or vaginal estrogen after menopause — and these are discussed on the Urinary Tract Infections page. The single most important message is simply this: do not use sandalwood oil to self-treat any infection.

Skin, Anti-Inflammatory & Aromatherapy Interest

Where sandalwood oil has genuinely interesting modern science is not in the bladder but on the skin and in the nose.

Dermatology. Purified sandalwood album oil has been studied as a topical anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial agent, and it has drawn attention in acne in particular, where its combined anti-inflammatory and antibacterial properties (including activity against Cutibacterium acnes, the bacterium involved in acne) make it a plausible adjunct. Reviews of botanicals and essential oils in acne discuss sandalwood among the candidates, and there have been small clinical evaluations of standardized sandalwood-oil formulations for acne and other inflammatory skin conditions such as eczema, psoriasis, warts, and molluscum. The honest summary: early and encouraging, but not yet backed by large, definitive trials — this is "promising adjunct," not "proven cure." It should never replace evidence-based acne care, but a well-formulated topical product is a reasonable thing to discuss with a dermatologist.

The "smelling" pathway — a real surprise. One of the most fascinating recent findings is that human skin cells carry olfactory receptors — the same family of "smell" sensors found in the nose — and that one of them, OR2AT4, is activated by a synthetic sandalwood-type odorant (Sandalore). In laboratory studies on human scalp skin, activating this receptor promoted wound-type healing responses and prolonged the growth phase of hair follicles, slowing hair death. This doesn't yet translate into a proven hair-loss treatment, but it is real, peer-reviewed cell biology showing sandalwood-like molecules have effects on skin beyond simply smelling nice.

Aromatherapy and mood. Sandalwood is one of the most enduring meditation and relaxation scents in the world, and small studies of inhaled sandalwood or santalol suggest calming, mildly sedative effects (changes in mood ratings and arousal). The evidence here is modest and the effect sizes small, but as a scent for relaxation — used safely by inhalation or in a properly diluted topical blend — it is low-risk and many people find it genuinely soothing. Just don't expect aromatherapy to treat a medical disease.

How Sandalwood Oil Is Used Today

Sandalwood oil's legitimate modern roles are mostly cosmetic, aromatic, and topical — not internal medicine. In practice that means:

Realistic, safe use. Essential oils are extremely concentrated and should be treated with respect. For topical use, sandalwood oil should be diluted in a carrier oil (such as jojoba or fractionated coconut oil), typically to a low single-digit percentage, and patch-tested on a small area first. For aromatherapy, inhalation or a diffuser is the norm; you do not apply neat (undiluted) essential oil to large areas of skin. There is no recommended internal dose, because — unlike in 1926 — sandalwood oil is no longer used as an internal medicine, and swallowing essential oils carries real risks (below). If you're using a finished cosmetic product, follow its label; if you're blending your own, dilute properly and start conservatively.

Sustainability & Adulteration

Two practical issues set sandalwood apart from most essential oils, and a careful, accurate page has to mention both.

Sustainability and legality. Decades of overharvesting and illegal logging — driven by sandalwood's high value — pushed wild Indian sandalwood (Santalum album) into serious decline. It is now classified as "Vulnerable" on the IUCN Red List, its harvest and trade in India are tightly regulated by the state, and the broader genus is the focus of active conservation and cultivation programs. The responsible approach today is to favor oil from certified, plantation-grown sources (Indian sandalwood is now farmed sustainably, notably in Australia) or to use the more abundant Australian species, Santalum spicatum. Buying genuine sandalwood is therefore partly an ethical choice, not just a quality one.

Adulteration. Precisely because real sandalwood oil is scarce and expensive, the market is awash in fakes and dilutions: oils stretched with cheaper woods or vegetable oils, synthetic "sandalwood" aroma chemicals (like Sandalore or other santalol substitutes), or oil from unrelated trees sold under the sandalwood name. A bottle labeled "sandalwood" may contain little or no actual santalol. If you care about either the scent or any potential skin benefit, look for the botanical species on the label (Santalum album or Santalum spicatum), a stated santalol content or GC analysis where available, and a reputable supplier. A suspiciously cheap "sandalwood essential oil" is almost certainly not the real thing.

Safety, Cautions & Myths

The 1926 enthusiasm skipped over the cautions entirely, so here they are clearly.

Key Research Papers

  1. Yan T, et al. (2024). Biological Properties of Sandalwood Oil and Microbial Synthesis of Its Major Sesquiterpenoids. Biomolecules, 14(8):971. — A current review of sandalwood oil's composition (santalols) and its antibacterial, antifungal, antiviral, anti-inflammatory, and antioxidant activities, plus efforts to make santalol microbially. (VERIFIED)
  2. Sharifi-Rad J, et al. (2023). Santalum Genus: phytochemical constituents, biological activities and health promoting-effects. Zeitschrift für Naturforschung C, 78(1–2):9–25. — A comprehensive review of sandalwood phytochemistry and its reported biological effects, useful for separating laboratory activity from proven clinical use. (VERIFIED)
  3. Verešová A, et al. (2024). Enhancing Antimicrobial Efficacy of Sandalwood Essential Oil Against Salmonella enterica for Food Preservation. Foods, 13(23):3919. — A modern in-vitro study of sandalwood oil's antibacterial activity against Salmonella — echoing, in a food-safety context, the very organisms the 1926 Dispensatory hoped it would suppress. (VERIFIED)
  4. Abd Algaffar S, et al. (2024). Sandalwood Oils of Different Origins Are Active In Vitro against Madurella mycetomatis, the Major Cause of Eumycetoma. Molecules, 29(8):1846. — Demonstrates real antifungal activity of sandalwood oils in the laboratory, illustrating both their bioactivity and the gap between dish and patient. (VERIFIED)
  5. Chéret J, et al. (2018). Olfactory receptor OR2AT4 regulates human hair growth. Nature Communications, 9:3624. — A landmark study showing a sandalwood-type odorant activates an olfactory receptor in human skin to promote healing and prolong hair growth — real modern skin biology for sandalwood-like molecules. (VERIFIED)
  6. Winkelman WJ. (2018). Aromatherapy, botanicals, and essential oils in acne. Clinics in Dermatology, 36(3):299–305. — Reviews botanical and essential-oil options in acne, including sandalwood, framing them as adjuncts rather than replacements for standard therapy. (VERIFIED)
  7. Geier J, et al. (2022). Contact sensitization to essential oils: IVDK data of the years 2010–2019. Contact Dermatitis, 87(1):71–80. — Patch-test surveillance data documenting sandalwood and other essential oils as contact allergens — the basis for the skin-sensitization warning above. (VERIFIED)
  8. Dozmorov MG, et al. (2015). Anticancer Effects of Sandalwood (Santalum album). Anticancer Research, 35(6):3137–3151. (PMID: 26026073) — A laboratory review of santalol's anti-cancer activity in cell and animal models; included to show the breadth of preclinical interest while underscoring that these are not clinical cures. (SEARCHLINK — no DOI; linked via PubMed)

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Connections

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