Jasmine palo santo incense sticks bring a soft floral thread to a woody incense ritual, made for those small pauses when a room needs warmth and focus. Light one before journalling, after tidying a room, or as a gentle marker between the day outside and the evening at home.
The scent as it settles
Jasmine gives the burn a floral lift, softening the deeper character associated with palo santo.
The smoke creates a slow, atmospheric moment rather than an instant room fragrance.
It suits calm home rituals: a cleared desk, a quiet bath, or a few minutes before meditation.
The large-stick format feels more intentional than a quick spark of scent.
Use it when you want fragrance to become part of the room, not just pass through it.
Palo santo with a jasmine note
These are palo santo incense sticks with a jasmine fragrance, from Peru. No making method is specified, so the value here is in the simple ritual of the stick itself: light, pause, let the smoke rise, and give the room a slower rhythm.
How to burn it safely
Place the plain end in a heat-resistant incense holder or ash catcher. Light the coated tip, let it catch briefly, then blow the flame out so the end glows and smokes.
Burn in a ventilated space, away from curtains, pets and draughts. Never leave burning incense unattended, and allow ash to fall onto a suitable surface.
Why palo santo carries meaning
Palo santo means ‘holy wood’ in Spanish, and the name reflects its place in South American ritual burning traditions. Today, palo santo incense is often chosen for mindful home fragrance and for marking a shift in the day: before meditation, after cleaning a room, or at the start of a quiet evening. Here, the jasmine note brings a softer, floral edge to that familiar woody idea, making the ritual feel gentle and personal.
Size and details
Set of four large incense sticks.
Total weight: 20 g.
Origin: Peru.
Fragrance: jasmine.
Range: Palo Santo Large Incense Sticks.
A thoughtful incense gi…
region of manufacture: Peru