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HybridTHC 18–24% · producer-reported

Brazilian Haze

Brazilian Haze is a hybrid cannabis strain. Its reported terpene profile leads with linalool.

Brazilian Haze leads with linalool — Lavender with a touch of gentle spice. Caryophyllene brings cracked black pepper, clove and warm cinnamon.

Terpene profile

The aroma compounds Brazilian Haze is reported to carry, strongest first. Illustrative — aggregated from public sources, not BudAbout lab results.

MyrceneEarthyLimoneneCitrus burstCaryophylleneSpicyLinaloolSoft floralPineneSharp freshTerpinoleneComplex pineyHumuleneEarthy hopsOcimeneSweet herbalNerolidolWoodyBisabololChamomileGeraniolSweet roseValenceneCitrus sweet4/12AROMAS
Aroma fingerprint

Brazilian Haze's illustrative profile lights up 4 of the 12 aroma terpenes, led by linalool. The lit wedges match the colored cards below — smell and flavor only, never effects.

Linalool · DominantCaryophyllene · SecondaryMyrcene · TertiaryPinene · Minor
Reported dominance
LinaloolDominant
CaryophylleneSecondary
MyrceneTertiary
PineneMinor
LinaloolDominant
Floral · linalool

Lavender with a touch of gentle spice.

LavenderRosewood

What research has explored: The lavender compound. Aromatherapy and animal studies suggest calming signals; controlled human evidence is limited and mixed.

CaryophylleneSecondary
Spicy · β-caryophyllene

Cracked black pepper, clove and warm cinnamon.

Black pepperCloveCinnamon

What research has explored: Unusual among terpenes — it can bind the body's CB2 receptors, so researchers study it for inflammation. Most data is preclinical.

MyrceneTertiary
Earthy · β-myrcene

Ripe mango, warm soil and a whisper of clove — soft and round.

MangoEarthClove

What research has explored: Cannabis's most common terpene. Studied for sedative- and muscle-relaxant–like effects — but largely in animal studies, often at high doses. Human evidence at the amounts found in flower is limited.

PineneMinor
Piney · α-pinene

Sharp fresh pine — cool mountain air, clean evergreen.

PineRosemaryBasil

What research has explored: Lab and animal work has examined alertness, memory, and airway-opening effects. Human evidence is limited.

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What stood out? (aroma, flavor, freshness)

Notes are about aroma, flavor, and the flower itself, and are rewritten into a compliant summary before publishing.

Ratings come from signed-in New Yorkers and describe aroma, flavor, and appearance — not effects, and not a BudAbout lab test.

More linalool-forward strains

Other strains whose illustrative profile is led by linalool.

Brazilian Haze FAQ

Q. What does Brazilian Haze smell and taste like?

Brazilian Haze leads with linalool — Lavender with a touch of gentle spice. Caryophyllene brings cracked black pepper, clove and warm cinnamon. These are illustrative aroma notes aggregated from public sources, not BudAbout lab results — and they describe smell and flavor only, never effects.

Q. What is the dominant terpene in Brazilian Haze?

Brazilian Haze's illustrative profile is led by Linalool (linalool), part of the "floral" aroma family, followed by Caryophyllene, Myrcene, Pinene. Terpene levels here are illustrative, not measured by BudAbout.

Q. Is Brazilian Haze a sativa, indica, or hybrid?

Brazilian Haze is commonly classified as a hybrid strain. Classifications vary by source and grower and don't guarantee any particular experience — this is general information for adults 21+.

Q. Does BudAbout lab-test Brazilian Haze?

No. BudAbout does not lab-test cannabis. The terpene profile shown here is illustrative and aggregated from public sources, and the THC range is producer-reported. We describe aroma and chemistry only.

THC ranges are producer-reported and terpene profiles are illustrative, aggregated from public sources — not BudAbout lab results. BudAbout describes aroma and chemistry only and makes no health or effect claims. This is general information, not medical advice. For adults 21+.