RCO vs NI Oils: What’s the Difference?

When you work with fragrances, flavours, or cosmetic formulations, you’ll often come across two terms that sound similar but are completely different: RCO and NI oils.
Because both are widely used in the aroma and flavour industry, people often mix them up — but understanding the difference can help you choose the right ingredient for your product.

So let’s break it down simply and clearly.

What Are RCO Oils? (Reconstituted Oils)

RCO stands for Reconstituted Oil.
These are carefully crafted blends made by combining multiple natural isolates, aroma chemicals, and sometimes fractions of essential oils to recreate the smell of a natural oil.

Think of it as rebuilding an essential oil piece by piece.

Why Use RCO Oils?

RCOs are popular because they are:

  • Consistent in aroma and quality
  • More stable than raw essential oils
  • Customisable for specific fragrance profiles
  • Cost-effective compared to expensive natural extracts
  • Allergen-reduced (in many cases)

For perfumery and FMCG companies, RCOs offer reliability, repeatability, and full control over the scent profile.

What Are NI Oils? (Natural Isolates)NI stands for Natural Isolate.
These are single aroma molecules extracted from natural raw materials.
For example:

  • Linalool (from lavender)
  • Geraniol (from palmarosa)
  • Limonene (from citrus)
  • Citral (from lemongrass)

These isolates are obtained through processes like fractional distillation, rectification, or extraction, and they represent one clean, isolated part of a natural essential oil.

Why Use NI Oils?

Natural isolates are:

  • Highly purified
  • Perfect for precision in formulation
  • Useful for building complex fragrances
  • Ideal for flavour houses needing clean, defined notes
  • More stable than complete essential oils

NIs help perfumers and formulators control the exact direction of the fragrance or flavour without depending on the complexities of whole essential oils.

RCO vs NI: The Key Differences

Let’s compare them in simple, real-world terms:

AspectRCO OilsNI Oils
CompositionBlended mix of isolates, naturals, aroma chemicalsSingle isolated molecule
PurposeTo recreate the smell of a natural oilTo provide clean, precise notes
StabilityVery stableHighly stable
CostUsually economicalSlightly more expensive per molecule
Aroma ProfileComplex, similar to essential oilSimple, singular note
Use CasesFragrances, FMCG, diffusers, soapsPerfumery, flavours, fine adjustments
CustomisationHighLow (single note)

In short:

  • RCO = a crafted blend
  • NI = a pure isolated component

Which One Should You Use?

Use RCO Oils if you want:

  • A consistent, natural-smelling profile
  • Cost-effective replication of essential oils
  • Smooth, stable blends for perfumes or personal care
  • Customisation options (e.g., softer citrus, sweeter florals)

Use Natural Isolates (NI) if you want:

  • High purity
  • Precision in building or modifying fragrance/flavour notes
  • Enhanced stability in formulations
  • Specific molecules at controlled concentrations

Both have their place — it depends on what you’re trying to create.