Thymus camphoratus (locally known as Portuguese: Tomilho do Mar) is a species of flowering plant in the mint family Lamiaceae, endemic to southwest Portugal.
Thymus camphoratus is an erect subshrub 15cm-30cmcm (06inches-10inchescm) in height. Young stems have a quadrangular section, with very short hairs. Leaves are 6-, ovate-triangular or rhomboidal, revolute in the upper half, acute or subobtuse, with whitish tomentose underside, with glabrescent or pubescent upper surface, densely covered with yellowish spheroidal glands. Inflorescence is 10mm15mm in diameter, capituliform. Bracts are 7-, broadly ovate, often pale pinkish or reddish, hairy, with scattered spheroidal glands, glandular hairs and marked veins on the underside. Calyx is 4mm6mm, flared; upper teeth are 0.7mm1mm, equal, not ciliated. Flowers are 5mm8mm, pink or purple; lower lip with large, subequal lobes. It has purple, exerted anthers. Fruits are 0.7-, ellipsoid and dark brown. 2n = 30.[1]
Thymus camphoratus is native to southwest Portugal, particularly in the Southwest Alentejo and Vicentine Coast Natural Park. It inhabits heathlands and xerophilic scrub on stabilized dunes of limestone based sands, always close to the coast.