
Two cannabis strains can carry the same THC number and still feel like completely different products. One smells like sliced mango and eases you toward sleep. The other is sharp with pine and keeps your head clear. That gap is mostly down to terpenes, the aromatic compounds that give cannabis its scent, its flavor, and a real say in how the experience lands.
THC and CBD get the headlines. Terpenes do a lot of the quiet work. This guide walks through the most common terpenes in cannabis, what each one smells like, the effects researchers have studied them for, and how to read a terpene profile so you can actually choose with intent instead of guessing from a strain name.
What terpenes actually do
Terpenes are produced in the same resin glands that make cannabinoids, and plants across nature use them for everything from deterring pests to attracting pollinators. In cannabis they shape aroma and flavor first. Their second job is more interesting. Terpenes appear to modulate how cannabinoids feel, a relationship often called the entourage effect.
The idea was laid out in detail by Dr. Ethan Russo in a widely cited 2011 review in the British Journal of Pharmacology, which mapped how individual terpenes might work alongside THC and CBD to influence mood, alertness, and relaxation. None of this makes terpenes a medicine. It does explain why the terpene profile tells you more about a product than the THC percentage on the label, and why terpenes versus THC is the wrong way to frame the question. They work together.
The most common cannabis terpenes
These are the terpenes you will see most often near the top of a cannabis Certificate of Analysis. Each entry covers the aroma, where else the compound shows up in nature, and the effects it has been studied for. Follow any name through to its full profile for the deeper chemistry.
1. Myrcene
Earthy, musky, with a faint clove and ripe-fruit edge. Myrcene is the most abundant terpene in modern cannabis and sits at the top of a large share of profiles. It also turns up in mango, lemongrass, and hops. Russo noted that myrcene is a recognized sedative in hops preparations used to aid sleep, which is part of why myrcene-dominant strains are so often described as heavy and relaxing. If a profile leans hard on myrcene, expect a calmer, more sedating character.
2. Limonene
Bright citrus, the smell of fresh orange or lemon peel. Limonene is one of the most common cannabis terpenes and the dominant note in citrus rinds. It has been studied for mood elevation and stress relief, and profiles built around it tend to read as upbeat and clear-headed rather than couch-locking.
3. Beta-Caryophyllene
Peppery and spicy, like cracked black pepper with a hit of clove. Beta-caryophyllene is unusual. Research published in PNAS identified it as a selective agonist of the CB2 cannabinoid receptor, which makes it the one common terpene that interacts directly with the endocannabinoid system. You will also find it in black pepper, cloves, and cinnamon. It is widely studied for its association with comfort and relaxation, and its versatility makes it a staple in formulation work.
4. Pinene (Alpha and Beta)
Sharp pine forest, with rosemary and basil in the background. Alpha-pinene and its partner beta-pinene are among the most abundant terpenes in the plant world. In cannabis they are associated with alertness and focus, and pinene is often credited with taking the edge off the foggy feeling that myrcene-heavy strains can bring. For the full breakdown, see our guide to alpha-pinene effects.
5. Linalool
Soft floral lavender with a touch of spice. Linalool is the compound behind lavender's calming reputation, and it has been studied for relaxation and stress relief. It usually appears as a secondary terpene rather than a dominant one, but even small amounts steer a profile toward the mellow end.
6. Humulene
Hoppy, woody, and earthy, the smell that defines a fresh IPA. Humulene shares chemistry with caryophyllene and frequently rides alongside it. It is common in hops, sage, and ginseng, and contributes the grounded, herbal backbone you notice in many earthy cultivars.
7. Terpinolene
Fresh and hard to pin down, somewhere between floral, herbal, and piney with a citrus lift. Terpinolene rarely dominates a profile, but it adds complexity and is the signature note in several well-known sativa-leaning strains. A little goes a long way.
8. Ocimene
Sweet, herbal, and slightly woody. Ocimene brings a fresh, almost tropical brightness and shows up in mint, parsley, and basil. It is often part of the supporting cast that makes a profile smell lively and clean.
More terpenes worth knowing
Beyond the headline group, plenty of secondary terpenes shape the finer details of aroma and effect. They appear in smaller concentrations but still matter when you are matching a profile to an outcome.
- Nerolidol: woody and floral with a hint of citrus, found in jasmine and tea tree, associated with a relaxed, soothing character.
- Bisabolol: soft, sweet, and floral, the calming note in chamomile, common in topical and wellness formulations.
- Valencene: sweet Valencia orange, a clean citrus top note that brightens a blend.
- Geraniol: rosy and sweet, the same compound that gives geraniums and roses their scent.
- Eucalyptol: cool, minty, and camphor-like, the crisp note from eucalyptus and rosemary.
- Camphene: damp, earthy, and piney, easy to mistake for myrcene at first sniff.
Quick terpene reference table
| Terpene | Aroma | Commonly reported character | Also found in |
|---|---|---|---|
| Myrcene | Earthy, musky, clove | Calming, sedating | Mango, hops, lemongrass |
| Limonene | Citrus, orange peel | Uplifting, clear-headed | Citrus rinds, juniper |
| Beta-Caryophyllene | Peppery, spicy | Comforting, relaxing | Black pepper, cloves |
| Pinene | Pine, forest | Alert, focused | Pine, rosemary, basil |
| Linalool | Floral, lavender | Mellow, soothing | Lavender, mint |
| Humulene | Hoppy, woody | Grounded, earthy | Hops, sage, ginseng |
| Terpinolene | Fresh, herbal, complex | Bright, layered | Nutmeg, apples, cumin |
| Ocimene | Sweet, herbal | Fresh, lively | Mint, parsley, basil |
| Nerolidol | Woody, floral | Relaxed, soothing | Jasmine, tea tree |
| Bisabolol | Soft, floral | Calming | Chamomile |
How to use terpene knowledge when choosing a product
Start with the terpene profile, not the THC number. A good cannabis terpene breakdown on a Certificate of Analysis lists each compound and its concentration, and the dominant terpene usually sets the tone. Myrcene at the top points toward relaxation. Limonene or pinene up front points toward a brighter, more functional experience.
Then look at the secondary terpenes, because they shade the result. A limonene-forward profile with a little linalool will feel softer than one backed by pinene. If you are shopping for a specific outcome, our guide to the best terpenes for natural pain relief shows how to read a profile for a goal rather than a strain name. Trust your nose too. Aroma and effect track closely, which is the whole reason terpenes are worth paying attention to.
How Entour formulates with these terpenes
Knowing the terpenes is one thing. Reproducing a profile batch after batch is another, and that is where most suppliers fall short. Entour is the terpene brand of The Werc Shop, the first commercial cannabis laboratory to test for terpenes back in 2011. Our True To Plant® process fingerprints individual cultivars by GC-MS and rebuilds the profile from natural, non-cannabis botanical sources, so the blend that performs in a sample performs the same way in production.
That library runs to more than 150 verified profiles. You can shop them as Native® Blends that recreate specific cultivars, Inspired Blends tuned for flavor, or Effects Blends built around a target experience. Every blend ships with the documentation a quality team expects.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most common terpene in cannabis?
Myrcene is the most abundant terpene across modern cannabis cultivars and sits at the top of a large share of terpene profiles. It is the earthy, musky note most people associate with the classic cannabis smell, and it is widely linked to calming, sedating character.
Do terpenes get you high?
No. Terpenes are not intoxicating on their own. They shape aroma and flavor, and they appear to influence how cannabinoids like THC feel through the entourage effect, but they do not produce a high by themselves.
Which terpene is the most relaxing?
Myrcene and linalool are the two most often associated with relaxation. Myrcene-dominant profiles tend to feel heavy and sedating, while linalool adds a soft, floral calm even in small amounts. Beta-caryophyllene is also widely studied for its comforting character.
How many terpenes are in cannabis?
Cannabis can contain more than 100 different terpenes, though only a handful appear in meaningful concentrations in any given cultivar. The ten or so covered above account for most of what you will smell and feel.
Are cannabis terpenes safe?
The terpenes found in cannabis are the same aromatic compounds found throughout fruits, herbs, and spices, and many are common food and cosmetic ingredients. As with anything, concentration and context matter, so quality sourcing and proper testing are what separate a reliable terpene product from a questionable one.
The takeaway
Once you can name the common terpenes and what they smell like, a Certificate of Analysis stops being a wall of numbers and starts reading like a flavor and effect map. Myrcene for calm, limonene for lift, pinene for focus, caryophyllene for comfort, and a supporting cast that fills in the details. Shop our terpene catalog to see how these profiles come together in blends built for real products.
About the author: The Entour team is a division of The Werc Shop, the first commercial cannabis laboratory to test for terpenes back in 2011. The team formulates True To Plant® terpene profiles for licensed cannabis brands across the US, Canada, and tribal markets.
Last updated: 11 June 2026
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