Buy PureFloral watersOnline in India - Bulk & Wholesale
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46% OFFSandalwood Hydrosol
4.5 / 5.0
(4) 4 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 639.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 1,200.00Sale price From Rs. 639.00Sale -
49% OFFRosemary Hydrosol
4.33 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 709.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 1,400.00Sale price From Rs. 709.00Sale -
11% OFFRose Floral Water
4.4 / 5.0
(5) 5 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 709.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 799.00Sale price From Rs. 709.00Sale -
49% OFFCoffee Hydrosol
4.33 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 709.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 1,400.00Sale price From Rs. 709.00Sale -
Frankincense Hydrosol
4.67 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 839.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 400.00Sale price From Rs. 839.00 -
Rose Hip Hydrosol
5.0 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 709.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 400.00Sale price From Rs. 709.00 -
49% OFFCucumber Hydrosol
3.75 / 5.0
(4) 4 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 709.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 1,400.00Sale price From Rs. 709.00Sale -
46% OFFLavender Hydrosol
4.67 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 639.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 1,200.00Sale price From Rs. 639.00Sale -
Lemongrass Hydrosol
4.33 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 639.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 400.00Sale price From Rs. 639.00 -
49% OFFTea Tree Hydrosol
4.67 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 709.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 1,400.00Sale price From Rs. 709.00Sale -
49% OFFClove Hydrosol
4.33 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 709.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 1,400.00Sale price From Rs. 709.00Sale -
Orange Hydrosol
4.67 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 709.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 400.00Sale price From Rs. 709.00 -
Olive Leaf Hydrosol
5.0 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 709.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 400.00Sale price From Rs. 709.00 -
Papaya Leaf Hydrosol
4.33 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 639.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 300.00Sale price From Rs. 639.00 -
Patchouli Hydrosol
4.67 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 709.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 300.00Sale price From Rs. 709.00 -
50% OFFNeem Hydrosol
4.67 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 699.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 1,400.00Sale price From Rs. 699.00Sale -
Jasmine Hydrosol
4.67 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 1,062.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 400.00Sale price From Rs. 1,062.00 -
47% OFFWitch Hazel Hydrosol
5.0 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 839.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 1,600.00Sale price From Rs. 839.00Sale -
Cinnamon Hydrosol
4.33 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 709.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 400.00Sale price From Rs. 709.00 -
Helichrysum Hydrosol
4.33 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 639.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 300.00Sale price From Rs. 639.00
Collapsible content
Which industries use floral waters?
Floral waters are used across cosmetic manufacturing, soap making, candle making, perfumery, aromatherapy, and household cleaning. In cosmetics, they serve as a water-phase base for toners, mists, and emulsions. In soap and candle making, they add natural fragrance without the intensity of essential oil. In perfumery, they're used as a lighter, water-soluble scent layer. In aromatherapy, for diffusion and topical use. And in household applications, natural floral waters like lavender are used as linen sprays and mild surface cleaners due to their antibacterial properties.
How are floral waters manufactured?
Floral waters are produced as a co-product of steam distillation: plant material -flowers, herbs, or botanicals -is distilled with steam, and the aromatic condensate (the water-soluble portion) is collected separately from the essential oil. This distillate carries the water-soluble compounds and a milder version of the plant's aroma.
Do floral waters contain preservatives?
It depends on the product and how it's stored. Pure steam-distilled floral water can be preservative-free if bottled and stored under controlled, low-contamination conditions, though many commercial floral waters do include a preservative to extend shelf life and prevent microbial growth, since water-based products are naturally prone to contamination.
Are floral waters 100% natural?
Genuine floral water, produced through steam distillation of real plant material, is 100% natural. However, the term "floral water" is also used in the market for products made by mixing water with essential oil or synthetic fragrance and a solubilizer -these are not the same as a true steam-distilled product, despite often being sold under the same name.
What packaging is best for floral waters?
Floral waters should be packaged in opaque or amber containers to protect against light degradation, with airtight, tamper-evident seals to prevent contamination and evaporation. For bulk and B2B shipments, food-grade HDPE containers or lined drums are standard for maintaining product integrity over longer transit times.
How should floral waters be stored during shipping?
Floral waters should be shipped and stored in a cool, temperature-stable environment, away from direct sunlight and heat, since prolonged heat exposure can degrade aromatic compounds and encourage microbial growth in a water-based product. Sealed, opaque packaging further protects against light and contamination during transit.
Are organic floral waters better?
Organic floral waters are distilled from plants grown without synthetic pesticides or fertilizers, which can matter for brands making organic or clean-label claims on their own finished products. In terms of aromatic quality, the distillation process matters at least as much as whether the source plant was certified organic -a poorly distilled organic floral water isn't automatically superior to a well-made conventional one.
What is the difference between steam-distilled floral water and infused floral water?
Steam-distilled floral water is a true co-product of essential oil production -plant material is distilled with steam, and the aromatic condensate is collected as a natural, water-soluble distillate. Infused floral water, by contrast, is made by mixing water with essential oil or fragrance oil and a solubilizing agent, without any actual distillation taking place.
About Floral waters

Floral Waters & Hydrosols
>Most "rose water" sold in Indian markets — grocery stores, general platforms, even some specialty suppliers — is not a hydrosol. It's rose oil or absolute stirred into plain water. That distinction sounds minor until you're formulating a product with it, or applying it to reactive skin, or trying to source consistently at scale. A genuine floral water hydrosol comes from steam distillation, and the water that condenses from that process is chemically different from anything you make by mixing.
RV Organica stocks over 30 floral waters and hydrosols from direct steam distillation — ranging from everyday varieties like rose, lavender, and peppermint floral water to less commonly sourced options like papaya leaf, patchouli, and coffee hydrosol.
What Is a Floral Water Hydrosol?
>During steam distillation, plant material — flowers, leaves, bark, roots — is exposed to pressurized steam. The steam pulls volatile aromatic compounds through a condenser, where it cools and separates. The essential oil floats at the top. The water below it is the hydrosol.
The two terms are used interchangeably in most markets. "Hydrosol" is technically more precise — it covers distillates from non-flowering plants, whereas "floral water" historically implied flower-based sources. In practice, the words describe the same thing: the water-phase condensate from distillation.
What's actually in that water matters. Hydrosols contain water-soluble aromatic molecules — terpene alcohols, organic acids, aldehydes — that don't transfer into the essential oil because they're hydrophilic. This is why lavender hydrosol and lavender essential oil have related but different aromatic profiles. The hydrosol tends to be milder, slightly acidic, and behaves differently in a formulation context.
One thing worth knowing upfront: "hydrosol" is not a regulated term anywhere in India or globally. A product labeled "rose hydrosol" with no documentation could be distilled water with rose fragrance added. For skincare or cosmetic formulation use, ask for a COA (Certificate of Analysis) and MSDS (Material Safety Data Sheet) before purchasing. Without both, there's no way to know what you're actually buying.
How Floral Waters Are Made — and Why the Source Matters
>Most hydrosols on the Indian market are byproducts. The distiller's primary target was the essential oil; the water that collected below it got bottled. That's not inherently a problem, but it does affect consistency and quality.
Dedicated hydrosol distillation — where the water phase is the intended product from the start — tends to produce cleaner aromatic profiles and better batch-to-batch consistency. Byproduct hydrosols sometimes get diluted with additional water to increase volume, or pick up suspended plant particulate that gets filtered out imperfectly. Without batch documentation, there's no way to differentiate.
The plant source matters too. Peppermint floral water distilled from fresh leaf in season smells noticeably different from one processed from dried or aging plant material. For home users applying a face mist, this is mostly an aesthetic concern. For brands formulating a consistent product across SKUs, it's a sourcing risk that compounds over time. If you're building a product around a specific hydrosol, establishing which distillation run a batch came from should be part of your supplier conversation.
Floral Water Uses for Skin and Hair
>As a Facial Toner
Hydrosols are probably most commonly used as toners in India right now, and most can be applied directly without dilution — this is one of their practical advantages over essential oils, which almost always require a carrier. That said, "most" isn't "all." Clove hydrosol and cinnamon hydrosol carry more active compounds than typical flower-based varieties and can cause irritation in people with sensitive or reactive skin. A 24-hour patch test on the inner arm before widespread use is worth doing regardless.
What hydrosols do well as toners: they hydrate, they're mildly pH-balancing (genuine hydrosols typically sit between pH 4.5 and 6.5), and some carry mild antimicrobial or astringent properties. What they don't do: they're not chemical exfoliants, they won't perform like a retinol or vitamin C serum, and the aromatic compounds in most hydrosols are present at concentrations well below what clinical research has studied for therapeutic effects. Use them because they feel good and work into a routine cleanly — the evidence for specific clinical outcomes is thinner than the marketing language often implies.
Seasonal note: from April through October in most of India, refrigerate your hydrosol toners once opened. Room temperature storage during peak heat months accelerates spoilage significantly faster than most shelf-life labels account for.
For Hair Rinse and Scalp Care
Rosemary hydrosol as a post-wash rinse has picked up considerable interest recently — partly driven by the broader rosemary-for-hair-growth conversation. The hydrosol version is milder than rosemary essential oil and doesn't need dilution in a carrier before application to scalp. Whether it genuinely promotes hair growth is harder to answer than the trend content suggests. Most of the research behind rosemary's hair-growth reputation used the essential oil, not hydrosol, and looked at sustained topical contact over months. A rinse-off product delivers a fraction of that contact time. The mechanism being studied — increased scalp microcirculation — likely requires longer dwell time than a rinse provides.
Neem hydrosol, on the other hand, has a stronger case for dandruff-prone scalps, given neem's documented antifungal properties. Hibiscus hydrosol gets used as a conditioning rinse in traditional Indian hair care — it absorbs quickly without the heaviness that oil-based treatments leave behind, which is genuinely useful in humid seasons. Jasmine hydrosol has a following for its scent in hair misting, though the functional benefits there are mostly aesthetic.
How to Choose a Floral Water Hydrosol
>Documentation first. Any supplier providing hydrosols for skincare or cosmetic use should supply a COA and MSDS for each batch. The COA should include pH, microbial count, and ideally the plant source and distillation method. An MSDS covers handling and storage. If a supplier can't produce both on request, that's the answer to whether you should order.
Check the pH. A genuine hydrosol is slightly acidic — typically 4.5 to 6.5. A neutral reading (around 7) on something labeled as hydrosol strongly suggests distilled water with added fragrance. You can verify this at home with a basic pH strip. Not dangerous, but not what you're paying for.
Storage in Indian conditions matters more than the label says. Most unpreserved hydrosols are rated for 6–12 months from distillation under ideal conditions — cool, dark, away from light. In India, those conditions don't exist in a typical home from April to September. Even a sealed bottle at room temperature in summer can develop microbial changes well inside that window. Signs of spoilage: cloudy appearance, an off or sour smell, visible particulate. Refrigerate after opening. During peak heat, order in quantities you'll use within 2–3 months.
For brands and formulators: byproduct hydrosols are common and not inherently inferior, but ask your supplier whether the batch you're sourcing was a dedicated distillation run or a co-distillation byproduct. For consistency across reformulations, dedicated runs are preferable. The per-litre price difference rarely justifies the sourcing inconsistency risk when you're building a product that customers will repurchase expecting the same experience.
Popular Floral Waters and Hydrosols
>Coffee Hydrosol Natural Toner — Pale amber in color, distinctly coffee-scented, and consistently one of the most-asked-about hydrosols for oily and acne-prone skin. The evidence base for specific skin benefits is mostly anecdotal at this point, but the product has built a real following. Not everyone wants their face mist to smell like a café, so that's worth knowing before ordering. Available in multiple sizes.
Sandalwood Hydrosol — Sandalwood hydrosol carries a lighter, more fleeting version of the wood's characteristic scent. If you've experienced sandalwood essential oil or attar, manage expectations — the hydrosol is substantially milder. It's used in toners, mists, and after-sun preparations where a heavy sandalwood note would be too much anyway. The sessions on this product page are the highest in the collection, which probably reflects the search volume around sandalwood in India rather than any unique property of the hydrosol specifically.
Frankincense Organic Floral Water Hydrosol — The aromatic profile here is milder than frankincense essential oil — a bit citrus-edged, resinous without being heavy — which makes it usable as a daily toner where the oil would be too concentrated for undiluted application. It's used in anti-aging formulations, though the research on frankincense compounds for skin regeneration is still largely preliminary. COA available at batch level.
Organic Rose Floral Water — The most recognizable entry point for people new to hydrosols, and one of the most misunderstood. This is steam-distilled from organic rose petals — not a dilution of rose essential oil in water. That's not a small distinction for formulators building a skincare line or anyone trying to source consistently. Works as a face mist, toner, or hydrophase in emulsions.
Rosemary Hydrosol Organic Hair Growth — Primarily sought for scalp application and post-wash rinse use. Mild enough for direct use without a carrier. The hair-growth association comes from essential oil research, not hydrosol-specific data — worth knowing if you're purchasing with specific outcome expectations. As a scalp refreshing spray and aromatic rinse, it works consistently well.
Hibiscus Hydrosol — Bright, slightly tart-smelling, and recognizable to anyone who's used hibiscus in traditional Indian hair care. The hydrosol version is lighter than oil-based hibiscus preparations and absorbs without residue — useful in humid months when heavier products feel uncomfortable. Also used in skin brightening preparations and facial mists.
Lemongrass Hydrosol — Sharp citrus-green aroma that translates cleanly from the plant into the hydrosol. Used as a skin toner, room mist, and a natural insect-repellent spray during monsoon months. Antimicrobial properties of lemongrass have been documented in research — at essential oil concentrations. The hydrosol is considerably milder, so the practical effect as a sanitizing spray is lower than some product descriptions suggest.
The complete range — 30+ floral waters and hydrosols — is available on this page. For bulk or wholesale enquiries, contact RV Organica directly.
About RV Organica
>RV Organica supplies steam-distilled floral waters and hydrosols in packaging from 100ml to bulk quantities. COA and MSDS documentation is available for every batch — request it before placing a first order. Products are tested at the batch level for pH and microbial safety before dispatch. Orders include batch references, which supports traceability for brands sourcing across multiple product lines.
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