Jasmine Flower Farming Guide: Cultivation, Perfume & Religious Use, Profitability

Jasmine  Flower Farming

Learn how to cultivate jasmine (Mogra) for religious, perfume, and export markets using organic methods. This guide covers soil, climate, varieties, pest control, harvesting, and income potential.

  1. Introduction

Jasmine, especially Jasminum sambac (Mogra) and Jasminum grandiflorum (Chameli), is a highly fragrant flower deeply rooted in cultural, religious, and commercial contexts. From sacred garlands to luxurious perfumes, jasmine is in constant demand across India and leading export markets. This guide provides a complete roadmap — from soil and climate to organic farming, harvesting, and profitability.

  1. Cultivated Species & Global Significance

Jasminum sambac – Used in garlands and hair adornments; widely grown in Karnataka (Mysore Mallige, Udupi Mallige), and GI-tagged varieties like Hadagali Mallige .

Jasminum grandiflorum – Known for its long blooming season and high oil content; cultivated for perfume and tea .

Jasminum auriculatum – Used in fast-growing garlands and ornamental work.

  1. Climate & Soil Requirements

Best grown in warm, tropical to subtropical climates, at altitudes up to 1200 m .

Flowers mainly bloom between March–June; irrigated cultivation occurs mostly between June–November .

Soil preference: Well-drained sandy loam to clay soils rich in organic matter, with pH 6.5–7.5 .

  1. Popular Varieties & Yields

CO‑1 (Chameli): Approx. 4200 kg/acre

CO‑2: Approx. 4800 kg/acre

Gundumalli: 2900–3300 kg/acre yield

Others: Arka Surabhi (~4100 kg/acre) .

  1. Land Preparation & Planting

Deep ploughing followed by pit digging (30 cm³). Soil mixed with FYM (~10 kg/pit) .

Plant using cuttings, layering, suckers, or tissue culture during June–November .

Recommended spacing: 1.5 m × 1.5 m for most varieties; Jui uses 1.8 × 1.8 m .

  1. Nutrient Management & Irrigation

Fertilize with NPK: N 60 g, P₂O₅ 120 g, K₂O 120 g per plant a year — split doses .

Organic additions: Neem cake, cow dung, compost, zinc, magnesium, and iron sulfate for deficiency .

Irrigation: Regular water post-planting; weekly in summer; pulsed after flowering .

  1. Pruning, Weed Control & Harvesting

Prune to 50 cm in November; weeding required every 3–4 weeks .

Harvest fully developed, unopened buds in early morning (esp. pre-10 AM for oil extraction) .

  1. Pest & Disease Management

Organic & conventional controls outlined below:

Issue Symptoms Control Solution

Aphids Sticky buds, leaf curling Neem oil, garlic-chili spray
Budworm/Thrips Damaged buds Monitor and organic sprays
Root/Nematode Rot Wilting, dark roots Soil drenches (Trichoderma)
Fungal Leaf Spot Brown spots Remove leaves, fungicide spray

Other conventional controls include monocrotophos or sulphur solutions .

  1. Harvesting & Post-Harvest Uses

Flowers for garlands, bouquets, temple rituals.

Essential oil: 0.24–0.42% yield from Jasminum grandiflorum .

Export potential: Flowers exported to US, France, UK, Canada, West Asia, Malaysia, and Singapore .

  1. Economic Highlights

Cultivation cost: ~₹42,576/acre .

Yield: ~7,452 kg/acre with net profit ₹69,203/acre .

Hadagali Mallige case (Karnataka): Profit ₹2.29 lakh/acre with BCR 2.02 .

Growth trend:

Year 1: 800 kg

Year 2: 1,600 kg

Year 3: 2,600 kg

Year 4+: ~3,600 kg .

Price peaks: Madurai Malli price can surge to ₹1,000/kg—especially during festivals .

  1. Export & Variety Branding

Many region-personalized varieties are GI-tagged, like Mysore Mallige, Udupi Mallige, Hadagali Mallige — valued globally due to unique aroma .

Jasmine absolute produced via solvent extraction is high-value in perfumery .

  1. Summary Table

Cost Item ₹/acre

Establishment Cost ₹42,000
Yield (Year 4+) ~3,600 kg
Price (avg) ₹140/kg
Gross Revenue ~₹5,00,000
Net Profit ~₹2,30,000

Value addition via attar, garlands, and exports can elevate earnings significantly.

✍️Real Neel

Founder -Farming Writers

Read A Peony flower Farming full guide 👇

https://worldcrop.wordpress.com/2025/08/07/peony-flower-farming/

Comments

8 responses to “Jasmine Flower Farming Guide: Cultivation, Perfume & Religious Use, Profitability”

  1. rajkkhoja Avatar
    rajkkhoja

    Wonderful you doing work. I appreciate your helpful knowledge sharing you. Beautiful you write for jasmine lower Farming information . You have good experience & knowledge. Iam so happy. Thank you so much 🙏.

    1. Farming Writers Avatar

      You’re very welcome! 😊
      I’m truly glad that you found the jasmine flower farming information helpful. Your kind words mean a lot — thank you for your appreciation and warm feedback. 🙏

      If you ever need more guidance or have any questions about farming, organic practices, or anything else, feel free to ask. Wishing you great success and happiness in your farming journey! 🌿🌼

      1. rajkkhoja Avatar
        rajkkhoja

        You are most welcome. Where you from & you have farm?

  2. Forestwood Avatar

    So interesting. I have just been writing about an organic jasmine tea blend. It is wonderful. So many benefits.

    1. Farming Writers Avatar

      Wow, that sounds amazing! Organic jasmine tea blends are truly special with so many health benefits. I’d love to know more about your blend—what ingredients do you use? It’s always inspiring to learn about natural and healthy creations like yours!”

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