Bergamot smells like a green-tinged citrus peel — brighter and more bitter than orange, with a soft floral edge that lemon lacks. There's a cool, slightly soapy quality to it, almost like Earl Grey tea, which is in fact scented with bergamot oil. The first impression is zesty and sparkling, but underneath sits a faintly spicy, woody bitterness from the peel's essential oils.
The Bergamot note appears across 2,723 published fragrances in our catalog. Use this page to compare how different brands work with Bergamot within the citrus family.

Calabrian bergamot is the headline note here, delivering a loud, peppery citrus burst that defines the entire opening before ambroxan takes over.

Bergamot opens the composition with a polished, slightly bitter brightness that sets up the patchouli-rose heart underneath.

Bergamot works alongside blackcurrant and pineapple

Bergamot sharpens the white-floral bouquet, giving the jasmine and ylang-ylang

A flash of bergamot cuts through the dense truffle and dark chocolate


Sicilian bergamot opens this honeyed tobacco composition with a sharp citrus contrast that prevents the sweetness from feeling syrupy.
The classic fougère opening — bergamot's citrus brightness lifts lavender's herbal-floral quality and keeps it from feeling soapy.
The foundation of the chypre family, where bergamot's bitter citrus plays against patchouli's earthy depth.
Bergamot sharpens rose's natural sweetness, adding a clean, slightly bitter edge that keeps the floral from turning syrupy.
Bergamot's bitterness cuts through vanilla's sweetness, creating the bright-sweet contrast common in modern oriental and gourmand compositions.
In construction, bergamot pairs naturally with the building blocks of classical perfumery. It sits comfortably over musk, sandalwood, and amber bases, and it sharpens floral hearts built on jasmine and damask rose. With patchouli, it forms the backbone of the chypre family — a structure that runs through countless modern compositions. Paired with vanilla, it produces the bright-sweet contrast that drives many gourmand and oriental fragrances. Alongside lavender, it shapes the classic fougère opening found in barbershop-style men's scents. It also amplifies other citrus notes — particularly lemon and mandarin — when a composition wants extra zest without losing depth. On the accord side, bergamot anchors fresh, citrus, and woody compositions, but it's just as common in spicy and floral structures, which speaks to how flexible it is across styles and seasons.
Bergamot frames jasmine's heavy indolic richness with daylight, making white-floral hearts feel more wearable.
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Guy Laroche
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