Terpenes linalool
Terpene · linalool

Linalool

The calming, anxiolytic terpene. Strains rich in linalool feel sedating and emotionally settling.

Strains 39 Lab verified Also in lavender · birch bark
39 Strains Tagged
198°C Boiling Point
3 Companions
floral Aroma

Deep dive

Molecular profile of linalool

Linalool is the floral monoterpene that gives lavender its calming smell. In cannabis it produces measurable anxiolytic and sedative effects independent of THC, and shows up most often in evening, sleep-supporting cuts like Bubba Kush and the Lavender lineage.

What linalool actually is

Linalool is a non-cyclic monoterpene with a higher boiling point than most cannabis terpenes (198°C). The aroma is distinctive: soft, floral, lavender-forward, with a faintly spicy undertone people sometimes pick up as cinnamon. In cannabis it rarely leads outright but commonly sits in the second or third position on a /glossary/coa/, where it reshapes the overall feel.

You meet linalool everywhere in the natural world:

  • Lavender — the canonical source, ~60% of lavender essential oil
  • Birch bark — surprising but significant
  • Rosewood, mint, cinnamon — culinary and aromatic uses
  • Coriander, basil — kitchen-shelf linalool

Industrial linalool is used in roughly 60–80% of all soap and shampoo products, which is why “smells like clean laundry” tracks so often in linalool-rich cuts.

What linalool-led strains feel like

The signature is emotional softening. Users describe a settling rather than a sedation — the body relaxes but stays mobile, the head clears but doesn’t dull, and the underlying stress register drops noticeably. Linalool stacks with myrcene to push toward sleep (/effects/sleepy/) or stacks with limonene to produce balanced anti-anxiety daytime cuts.

Strains where linalool plays a notable role: /strains/bubba-kush/, /strains/lavender/, /strains/amnesia-haze/ (in some phenotypes), and most floral-flavored cuts you’ll find under /flavors/floral/.

Common companions:

  • Myrcene — the sleep-stack combo
  • Caryophyllene — adds clarity to linalool’s softness
  • Humulene — earthy-floral combo

The science: anxiety, GABA, and sleep architecture

Linalool has one of the cleanest research records in aromatherapy science, and the cannabis literature builds directly on it.

  • Anxiolysis without sedation — rodent studies and small human trials show linalool reduces anxiety markers at sub-sedative doses
  • GABA-A modulation — linalool appears to enhance GABA-A activity, the same broad mechanism benzodiazepines and alcohol act through (much weaker, but the same family)
  • Analgesia in animal models — measurable, particularly in inflammatory pain
  • Antiepileptic activity — early-stage research; some animal models show seizure threshold increases

The effects appear at inhalation doses comparable to what you’d get from a linalool-led cannabis cut. That’s part of why linalool-rich cuts tend to feel reliably calming — there’s a real pharmacological floor independent of cannabinoid content.

How to shop for linalool-rich flower

Smell test: lavender, soft floral, slightly powdery. If a jar reads as “perfumey” or “soap-adjacent,” linalool is contributing. A /glossary/coa/ confirms — linalool above 0.2% is enough to shift the felt experience.

For sleep, look for myrcene-leading cuts with linalool in the second slot. For daytime stress relief without sedation, look for limonene-leading cuts with linalool present.

Terpene profile

Aroma signature

floral, lavender-soft, faintly spicy

Also found in

lavender, birch bark, rosewood, mint, cinnamon

Boiling point

198°C / 388°F

Vape below this temp to preserve; combust above to release.

Mechanism of action

What does linalool do?

Linalool is the active terpene in lavender. It's why your grandmother's sachets calm you down, and why linalool-rich cannabis strains feel softening rather than spinning. Bubba Kush, Lavender, and Amnesia Haze are linalool-forward. In rodent studies, linalool produces measurable anxiolytic effects independent of cannabinoids.

Reported effects

Physiological signature

  • anxiolysis
  • sedation
  • muscle relaxation
  • analgesia
  • sleep onset support

Entourage

Common companions

Linalool rarely shows up alone — these terpenes most often co-express with it in modern cannabis flower.

Market data

Top linalool-leading strains

39 strains in the database list linalool as a primary terpene. Sorted by search volume, then THCA potency.

All strains
# Strain Type THCA% Aroma notes
#1 Runtz hybrid candy · fruit
#2 White Runtz hybrid candy · fruit
#3 Candy Runtz hybrid candy · sweet
#4 Cookies Gelato hybrid cookie · cream
#5 After Dark indica earth · fuel
#6 Do-Si-Dos indica-leaning sweet earthy · pine
#7 Grape Ape indica grape
#8 Project 4516 hybrid vanilla cake · creamy
#9 Bacio Gelato indica-leaning mint chocolate · sherbet
#10 Pancakes indica-leaning vanilla · sweet
#11 Ice Cream Cake indica-leaning vanilla · cake
#12 Black Cherry Pie indica-leaning cherry · pie
Showing 12 of 39 linalool-led strains Browse all

Availability

Brands carrying linalool-rich strains

Active research

Research focus areas

anxiolysis

analgesia (animal models)

GABA-A modulation

antiepileptic potential

THCAmap does not provide medical advice. These are active research areas, not clinical claims. See our primer on THCA for context on cannabinoid + terpene synergy.