Billie Eilish Fragrances is a licensed line — produced by Parlux Ltd., the US house behind Paris Hilton and Vince Camuto scents — launched November 2021 direct-to-consumer before reaching Ulta. What separates it from the usual celebrity drop is that Eilish is a documented fragrance collector, and the briefs read that way: each release is a hard pivot from the last rather than a recolored repeat. Every release is vegan, paraben-free, and PETA-certified cruelty-free, shipped in a renewable-wind-energy carton.
The line splits cleanly in two. The first three — Eilish, No. 2, and No. 3 — sit in the sculpted amber-bust bottle and move from a very sweet amber gourmand toward darker woody-spicy territory. The 2025 reboot, Your Turn and Your Turn II, switches to a stacked-dice bottle and a cooler, woodier register; the brand calls this the shift to a master brand beyond the original numbered run. Frank Voelkl of DSM-Firmenich — the perfumer behind Glossier You and Le Labo Santal 33 — composed Your Turn, which is the clearest tell of where the line is now aiming.
Reception tracks the split. No. 1 is the polarizing one — fans read it as warm and cozy, skeptics as a plastic-doll sweetness. No. 2 has the higher critical regard and reads more unisex. Your Turn drew the barbershop-with-a-tropical-edge comparisons and the under-the-radar Santal 33 nods. Short longevity is the recurring complaint across the woodier releases. Which one is the Billie Eilish perfume depends entirely on which of these two camps you are shopping.
| Release | Year | Family | Anchor notes | Reads as |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eilish (No. 1) | 2021 | Amber gourmand | Cocoa, vanilla, tonka, sugared petals | Sweet, powdery, polarizing |
| Eilish No. 2 | 2022 | Woody floral musk | Bergamot, incense, papyrus, ebony, vanilla | Darker, spicier, more unisex |
| Eilish No. 3 | 2023 | Woody ambery | Pink pepper, saffron, fir, cedar, oakmoss | Festive, wintry, spicy |
| Your Turn | 2025 | Woody fresh | Bergamot, cardamom, coconut water, sandalwood, Sylvamber | Cool, androgynous, Santal-adjacent |
| Your Turn II | 2025 | Woody fruity | Mirabelle plum, fig nectar, black tea, vetiver, cedarwood | Darker, fruitier, autumn-winter |
There is no single house accord, which is the point of the line — but there is a through-line: vanilla and a soft amber-woody base run under almost every release, with the top and heart doing the work of differentiation. The original Eilish leans hardest into the sweet end, a cocoa-and-vanilla amber gourmand that some readers find cozy and others find cloying. From No. 2 onward the sweetness gets pushed back and shaded with smoke, pepper, and dry woods such as papyrus, ebony, and cedar, which is why the later releases read more grown-up and more unisex.
Your Turn is the cleanest break: bergamot, cardamom, and coconut water over Australian sandalwood and Sylvamber, an upcycled Iso E Super-style ambery wood, which is what earns it the Santal 33 comparisons. Your Turn II turns the dial toward fruit and resin — plum, fig, black tea, and a vetiver-cedar base that reads darker and more autumnal. Across the board, projection is moderate and longevity is the most common gripe, especially on No. 3 and the Your Turn pair.
Two of the line are easy to find and sample right now. If you want the original sweet-vanilla character, start with Eilish — but test it on skin first, because it is the most divisive of the five and the cocoa-vanilla sweetness is not for everyone. If you bounced off No. 1, Eilish No. 2 is the safer bet — smoky, peppery, and more wearable across genders, and the release that pulled in the most positive reviews.
No. 3 launched as a 2023 limited edition and was reissued as a permanent release in 2026, so it is easy to buy again; the Your Turn pair is the newer, DTC-first woody-fresh and woody-fruity direction the brand is now pushing, so if the sweet bottles are not your thing, that is where to look. As a rule: shop the amber-bust bottle for sweet-and-cozy, and the stacked-dice bottle for cooler woods. Buy a sample before a full bottle — the line runs short on longevity, and the gap between camps is wide enough that loving one says little about the next.
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Billie Eilish
Eilish No. 2