Types of Sage & Smudging Herbs
Know your plants before you light them
White Sage (Salvia apiana)
The plant most associated with smudging in North America. It has a strong, resinous, almost camphor-like aroma. Native to the coastal sage scrub of Southern California and Baja California, it is the species most affected by overharvesting concerns.
Other Common Smoke-Cleansing Plants
Common Sage (Salvia officinalis)
The culinary sage found in most grocery stores. It burns with a milder, earthier scent than white sage and is widely available and easy to grow, making it a more sustainable substitute.
Sweetgrass
Often braided rather than bundled, sweetgrass has a sweet, vanilla-like scent and is traditionally used by many Indigenous nations alongside or instead of sage, often to invite in positive energy after a space has been cleared.
Cedar
Cedar leaves or chips produce a sharp, woody smoke and are traditionally associated with protection and grounding in many North American Indigenous practices.
Palo Santo
A fragrant wood from a tree native to South America, palo santo (“holy wood”) is burned in small sticks rather than bundles and has a sweet, citrusy scent. It comes from its own distinct cultural tradition rather than North American smudging.
Rosemary, Lavender, and Mugwort
These herbs are increasingly used as accessible, easy-to-grow alternatives or additions to a smoke-cleansing bundle, each contributing its own scent profile and folk associations — rosemary for clarity, lavender for calm, mugwort for dream work.
Choosing What to Use
- If sourcing white sage, look for suppliers who buy from licensed harvesters or grow it themselves rather than wild-harvesting it.
- Consider growing your own sage, rosemary, or lavender — all are easy garden or pot herbs in most climates.
- Match the herb to your intention: sage and cedar for clearing, sweetgrass and lavender for inviting calm, rosemary for mental clarity.










