Rosemary, Mint, Basil all do well in pots, will make your room smell good, and are edible. Lavender smells good, but isn't edible.
Use the leaves to flavor water or make mixed drinks. Rosemary or Lavender sprigs in your dresser will keep your clothes smelling nice.
EDIT: Dried Lavender flowers are edible, but most varieties of Lavender taste like Camphor and are best used as tea for colds and sore throats.
Most plants that smell good probably won't grow in your room UNLESS you have a super sunny window that gets full sun that will be beating down on the plants for at least 8 hours every day.
If you don't have that kind of sun for indoor plants, you can consider planting aromatic herbs outdoors (they do great in pots) and bring in boquets to scent your room. You can also dry boquets of herbs for your room which will last longer and be less maintenance.
You could also consider going to your local health food store and buying dried herbs like lavendar and rose buds in bulk and making your own sachets. I used to use small cloth bags to make sachets for my drawers, made my clothing smell good and are a deterrent to insects. If you put the dried herbs into open bowls or other decorative containers it's called poupourri.
Better burn a stick of incense.
Peppermint, basil, marijuana, thyme
Lavender smells very good.
JASMINEEEEEE!!!!! i highly recommend!
when I lived much further north, I had a lilac plant outside my bedroom window. When they bloom they are heavenly. Now I have jasmine outside my front door and fruit trees all over. They all have great smells. You might consider some plants to put outside your doors or windows so that when you open them the smell comes into the house. There are many that grow better outside than in.
The Jasmine creeper is outstanding
Lemon trees! If you continue trimming they don't grow very big. It'll look like an average house plant. Plus the leaves smell like Pine-Sol/Citrus cleaning agent.
Jasmine plants and pretty much all citrus plants smell good when they have flowers.
Oregano. Basil. Rosemary...any herbs used in the kitchen. It maybe quite difficult to grow indoor.
Me and my other half has been doing the same thing. But we found that the best plants to have were just standard plants that are air purifiers, it has made a massive difference. When we buy flowers now they smell even more gorgeous. We have Draconia, Peace lilies and spider plants.
rose is really good plant in this respect.
It really depends on the amount of light you can offer your plants. I would recommened small citrus trees. Get a sambac jasmine, and grow in a big pot as a small tree. Once a year in the cool spring months it will flower. Try scented geraniums, lavender, basil, mint. rosemary, helichrysum, which release a burst of essential oils when you touch them.. Also, potted carnations. You can force bulbs like narcissus and hyacinth. I think you will have to rotate plants or grow many different species so you always have something fragrant growing or blooming.
To tell you the truth, fragrant flowers get their scent from being outdoors in the warm air and sun. You can purchase flower fragrances in the form of candles or some air fresheners that would be much easier to take care of and smell stronger than the actual flowers who's fragrance they represent. And you have the advantage of having several different fragrances to choose from, depending on the mood you're in.
Cestrum nocturnum AKA queen of night
I really like the smell of Marijuana, and I know most people hate it. Sometimes it's very over barring, but it relaxes me.
Peppermint, Mint, Oregano, more than I I can name in one sitting.
Weed smells good it's a plant
Assess your office lighting. Obviously, a plant that needs full sun doesn't have much of a chance in a windowless copy room, but figure out where you can put plants in your office and determine how much natural sunlight they'll get on average. However, when in doubt, low light (shade-loving) plants will do fine in most office settings (such as the top of a cubicle in the center of the floor or away from the windows). Some plants will do well if placed near the fluorescent lights in the office. If you have access to south-facing windows that offer a lot of sunlight, you'll have more flexibility in choosing plants. Decide how much space will be designated for the plant. Get an idea both of the floor or counter space and the vertical space available
Violets, Rosemary, and roses are among my favorites.
Lavender
Scented Geranium
Gardenias
Mint
These plants are smell really good.
Sampaguita or Jasminum sambac. It really smells so good.
Lavender smells really good
Arabian Jasmine
Citrus
Eucalyptus
Gardenia
Magnolia and camellia flowers smell pretty good.
The following being kinds of plant will produce fragrant flowers or etc.:
(1) Honeysuckle==Lonicera species;
(2) Wax plant===Hoya species;
(3) Coriander===Coriandrum species;
(4) Aromatic madder==Elsholtzia species;
(5) Mint=========Anisomeles species;
(6) Peppermint====Mentha species;
(7) Chinese sacred Lily==Narcissus species;
(8) Chinese Cymbidium==Cymbidium species;
(9) Lemon-grass===Cymbopogon species;
(10) Sweet Pea===Lathyrus species;
Yip
Because those the ones that people don't piss on.
jasmine is good, lilacs smell good, lavender, rosemary, lots of herbs have good scents
Depending on how much Sun your room gets, it will depend. You may want some basic houseplants, usually just greenery. Get some incense, comes in many scents. Or scented candles or potpourri.
Jasmine tree, Basil, Lavender, Rosemary.
Number 1, gardenia. Also outside, a privacy shrub, eleagnus, smells wonderful in October...tiny tiny flowers, but a breeze flows through and permeates the surrounding area with a beautiful scent.
These 10 plants make your stroll through the garden smell as good as it looks.
1. Lily of the valley ( Convallaria majalis and cvs.)
2. Wisteria sinensis and cvs.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 5 to 9
Size: 28 feet high and indefinite width
Conditions: Full sun to partial shade; fertile, well-drained soil
3. Wisteria sinensis and cvs.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 5 to 9
Size: 28 feet high and indefinite width
Conditions: Full sun to partial shade; fertile, well-drained soil
4. Convallaria majalisand cvs.
Zones: 2 to 7
Size: 9 inches tall, spreading indefinitely
Conditions: Full sun to full shade; humus-rich, moist soil
5. Abelia mosanensis ‘Monia’
Zones: 5 to 9
Size: 6 feet tall and 5 feet wide
Conditions: Full sun to partial shade; well-drained soil
6. Clematis armandii
Zones: 7 to 11
Size: Up to 15 feet tall and 10 feet wide
Conditions: Full sun to partial shade; fertile, well-drained soil
7. Clerodendrum trichotomum
Zones: 7 to 9
Size: 15 to 20 feet tall and wide
Conditions: Full sun; moist, well-drained soil
8. Liliumcvs.
Zones: 4 to 9
Size: 1 to 6 feet tall and 1 to 2 feet wide
Conditions: Full sun; well-drained soil
9. Actaea simplex‘Black Negligee’
Zones: 4 to 8
Size: 4 to 6 feet tall and 4 feet wide
Conditions: Partial shade; moist, well-drained soil
10. Vitex agnus-castusand cvs.
Zones: 6 to 9
Size: Up to 25 feet tall and wide
Conditions: Full sun; well-drained soil
jasmin ,wild Gorse,Rose ,Yucca gloriosa .
Pine trees. Are trees plants? Probably.
Mints, like peppermint, lemon balm, or like others said lavender, rosemary is a unique but not a bad smell. Basil, tarragon . There is a lot of herbs you can keep in small pots on a window seal just have to go to a nursery or garden center.
Violets smell great. Lots of plants with perfumed flowers don't survive well in a room. Perhaps grow them in a pot outside and then bring in for a week while in flower.
Gardenia
Texas Mountain Laurel
Flowering ginger
Persian lilac
Persian jasmine
rose sage
plumeria
bitter melon
rose Abraham Lincoln
rose yves piaget
narcissus
alyssum
pussy willow
curry plant[helychrisum italicum]
lavender
test some out and see and quit asking random people about it on here got it
I dnt know but probably roses.