Sabrina Carpenter Perfume is a celebrity license, not a designer house — the line is built and distributed by Scent Beauty (the same fragrance operation behind several artist collaborations) and sold under the Sweet Tooth name. The first release, Sweet Tooth, debuted at Walmart in 2022 for about $30, with a bottle shaped like a chocolate bar; the brand has since expanded into Ulta and direct-to-consumer at larger sizes. Every release so far has been an eau de parfum composed by Gil Clavien.
The house style is narrow on purpose. Across the published catalog the dominant accords are sweet, gourmand, creamy, and — honestly — synthetic, built on a recurring base of musk, amber, patchouli, and dark chocolate. These are dessert fragrances: marshmallow, caramel, and cherry sit up front, vanilla and woods underneath. There is no fresh, green, or sharp-citrus entry in the line, and that consistency is the point — if you like one, you will probably like the others.
Treat this as accessible, mass-market gourmand rather than a designer-longevity buy. The recurring community verdict is that the scents smell good but fade fast (covered below), which is the trade-off for the price. They skew young and feminine in marketing terms, work best as casual everyday wear, and reward a buyer who already knows they want something sweet.
| Release | Year | Dominant accent | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sweet Tooth | 2022 | Marshmallow + chocolate | The benchmark sweet gourmand |
| Caramel Dream | 2023 | Burnt-sugar caramel | Softer, more wearable sweetness |
| Cherry Baby | 2024 | Cherry + dark chocolate | Fruit-forward, more divisive |
All three published releases share a sweet gourmand spine — the differences are which dessert leads. The original Sweet Tooth is the marshmallow-and-chocolate one: candied ginger and bergamot on top, coconut milk and vanilla in the heart, whipped cream and cashmere wood underneath. It reads like a warm bakery rather than a fruit. Caramel Dream swaps the chocolate for burnt-sugar caramel softened with orange blossom and peach, landing closer to a salted-caramel dessert with a powdery finish. Cherry Baby is the fruity outlier and the line's most divisive: cherry, plum, and apple over dark chocolate, with the cherry reading bright to some and a little synthetic-cough-syrup to others.
What ties them together is the base. Musk, amber, patchouli, and woods do the heavy lifting once the sugar burns off, which is why the dry-downs converge on a soft, slightly powdery skin-scent regardless of which one you started with. None of these smell like an expensive niche gourmand — they smell like well-made affordable candy, and they are honest about it.
If you want the most representative pick, start with the original Sweet Tooth — it is the marshmallow-chocolate scent the line is named for and the one most reviews benchmark against. Choose Sweet Tooth Caramel Dream if you prefer caramel and a softer, more wearable sweetness, and Sweet Tooth Cherry Baby if you want fruit up front and do not mind a sharper cherry. All three are eau de parfum and priced in the same accessible band, so the choice is about which dessert you want, not about quality tiers.
Sample before committing to a full bottle if longevity matters to you — these reward layering or midday reapplication more than a single morning spray. The body-mist versions exist but are not covered here; the eau de parfum is the format worth your money.
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Sabrina Carpenter
Sweet Tooth Caramel Dream
Eau De Parfum