To use bakhoor at home: place 3–6 chips on a hot charcoal disc inside a mabkhara, or onto a preheated electric bakhoor burner. The chips will smoulder immediately, releasing thick aromatic smoke. Carry the burner slowly through each room or leave centrally placed for ambient scenting. For everyday use, an electric burner is the simplest and safest option. For occasions and the full traditional experience, charcoal delivers greater intensity and cultural depth.
What Is Bakhoor?
Bakhoor (also written bukhoor or bakhur, from the Arabic بخور) refers both to a type of oud-based incense and to the act of burning it. It is made from agarwood chips that have been soaked or blended with fragrant oils, resins, musk, florals and spices. When placed on a heat source, the chips smoulder slowly, releasing dense, richly aromatic smoke.
Bakhoor is not self-contained — it requires an external heat source to burn, and the experience is considerably more intense and immersive than most Western home fragrance formats. For a full comparison of bakhoor and incense cones, see our guide: Bakhoor vs Incense Cones: What’s the Difference?
What You Need Before You Start
A plug-in electric plate that heats to a controlled temperature. Place bakhoor chips directly on the plate. Simple, safe, consistent, no charcoal required.
Best for: Daily use, modern homes, beginners.
A charcoal disc lit and placed inside a decorative mabkhara. Bakhoor chips are placed on the hot charcoal. More atmospheric and culturally traditional.
Best for: Occasions, gatherings, the full Gulf hospitality experience.
How to Use an Electric Bakhoor Burner
Place the electric burner on a hard, flat surface away from soft furnishings, curtains and anything flammable.
Turn the burner on and allow it to reach temperature — typically 1–2 minutes.
Place chips directly onto the heated plate. They will begin smouldering within seconds. Start with 3 chips and add more if needed. For a large open-plan space, 5–7 chips is typical.
Leave the burner centrally placed. The fragrance will fill the space over 15–30 minutes. For a whole-home effect, carry the burner slowly from room to room before settling it in the main living area.
Remove spent chips and add fresh ones to continue the session.
Switch off the burner and allow the plate to cool completely. Wipe with a dry cloth to remove any residue.
How to Use Bakhoor with Charcoal (Traditional Method)
Place your mabkhara on a heat-resistant surface — a stone coaster, ceramic trivet or metal tray. The base of a mabkhara can become very hot during use.
Hold a charcoal disc with metal tongs over a flame for 20–30 seconds until sparks travel across the surface. Wait until the entire disc is uniformly grey-white — typically 4–6 minutes. Under-lit charcoal produces an acrid smell — wait until fully ashed over before adding bakhoor.
Once the charcoal is glowing evenly, place 3–6 bakhoor chips directly onto the disc. Fragrant smoke will rise immediately.
In Gulf tradition, the mabkhara is carried slowly through each room before guests arrive to infuse the whole home with fragrance.
Set the mabkhara on a stable surface in the main room. A single charcoal disc typically burns for 45–60 minutes; add fresh bakhoor chips as needed.
Allow the charcoal disc to burn out completely — never extinguish with water. Allow at least 2 hours before disposing of the ash.
How Much Bakhoor to Use
The figures below are approximate starting points — ventilation, ceiling height and bakhoor blend will all affect the result.
- Small room (up to 15 m²): 2–4 chips
- Medium room (15–30 m²): 4–6 chips
- Large or open-plan space (30–60 m²): 6–10 chips
- Whole home circulation before guests: 8–15 chips over a full session
Start conservatively. It is much easier to add more chips than to reduce an overpowering scent in an enclosed space.
Ventilation: Getting the Balance Right
A slightly open window — 3–5 cm — is enough to prevent smoke build-up without meaningfully reducing the fragrance. Aromatic compounds from bakhoor absorb into soft furnishings quickly; the scent tends to persist in fabric long after the smoke has cleared, regardless of ventilation.
Bakhoor Etiquette: The Gulf Tradition in a Modern UK Home
Using bakhoor 20–30 minutes before guests arrive fills the home with a lingering fragrance that greets visitors as they enter. Many NUHR customers use bakhoor for Eid celebrations, family gatherings, and formal occasions, while relying on incense cones for daily use.
Which Burner Should You Use?
- You want daily or regular use without setup
- You live with children or pets
- You want consistent, controllable results
- You’re new to bakhoor
- You prefer a modern, minimal aesthetic
- You want the full intensity and traditional experience
- You’re using bakhoor for occasions and gatherings
- You want to circulate the burner through the home
- The ritual element matters to you culturally
- You want the densest, most immersive smoke
For a full breakdown: Electric Bakhoor Burner vs Charcoal Burner: Which Is Better?
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Using too much bakhoor in an unventilated room
The most common first-time error. Start with a small quantity and a slightly open window.
Not fully lighting the charcoal before adding bakhoor
Under-lit charcoal produces an acrid, chemical smell from the disc itself. Wait until the disc is uniformly grey before placing any chips.
Adding too many chips at once
Build up gradually: start with 3 chips, assess the result, and add more only if the intensity feels insufficient for the space.
Expecting the fragrance to disappear quickly
Bakhoor fragrance in soft furnishings can persist for several hours. A heavy session the evening before may still be noticeable the next morning.
The NUHR Range
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does bakhoor take to start working?
On an electric burner, bakhoor begins smouldering within 30–60 seconds. The room will fill with fragrance within 3–5 minutes; peak intensity is typically reached after 10–15 minutes.
How often can I use bakhoor at home?
Many households find 1–3 times per week the natural rhythm. Because bakhoor fragrance can linger in fabrics for several hours, very frequent use can cause the scent to accumulate.
Can I use bakhoor in a bedroom?
Yes, but use a smaller quantity (2–3 chips maximum), ensure some ventilation, and burn bakhoor at least 30–45 minutes before sleep.
Why does my bakhoor smell like burning plastic?
This usually means the charcoal is not fully lit. Wait until the disc is uniformly grey before adding chips. High-quality bakhoor made with genuine oud produces a rich, woody, resinous smoke without acrid notes.
Is bakhoor safe to use around children?
With sensible precautions, yes. Keep the burner out of reach, ensure the room is ventilated, and never leave burning bakhoor unattended. Do not burn in rooms occupied by birds, as avian respiratory systems are particularly sensitive to smoke.
How do I store bakhoor chips?
Store in a sealed container — a glass jar or airtight tin. Keep away from direct sunlight, heat and moisture. Well-stored bakhoor retains its fragrance for 12–24 months or longer.
What is the difference between bakhoor and oud oil?
Bakhoor is burned to scent a space; oud oil (attar) is applied to skin or clothing to scent a person. For a full explanation, see: What Is Oud? The Complete Guide to Agarwood Fragrance.
Can I mix different bakhoor blends together?
Yes — mixing two or three chips from different blends is a common way to create a more complex or personalised fragrance. Start with one chip of each and adjust from there.
Key Takeaways
- Electric burners are the most practical choice for everyday UK home use — no charcoal, no open flame, consistent results
- Charcoal delivers higher intensity and the full traditional experience — best suited to occasions and gatherings
- Always start with 3 chips — it is much easier to add more than to reduce an overpowering scent
- A slightly open window improves comfort without meaningfully reducing the fragrance
- Bakhoor tends to linger longest in rooms with soft furnishings — curtains, sofas and rugs absorb and anchor the fragrance
- For daily home scenting without equipment, oud incense cones are the simpler everyday format
Recommended Next Reading
→ Electric Bakhoor Burner vs Charcoal Burner: Which Should You Choose? — compares both methods in detail for UK home use
→ Direct vs Indirect Oud Burning — the technical distinction between heating and combustion, and what it means for the result
→ Why Cooking Smells Linger in Soft Furnishings — the science behind why oud fragrance from bakhoor is absorbed into fabric and can persist for hours
→ New to Oud? Start Here — the full orientation guide across all NUHR oud guides