Vanilla smells warm, sweet, and creamy, with a soft resinous quality like the inside of a vanilla pod scraped fresh. Natural vanilla absolute carries hints of rum, dried fruit, and tobacco, while synthetic vanillin reads cleaner and more like sugar cookies or custard. In fragrance it often comes across as balsamic and slightly smoky, with a powdery dry-down that lingers close to the skin.
The Vanilla note appears across 2,375 published fragrances in our catalog. Use this page to compare how different brands work with Vanilla within the vanilla family.
The fragrance that defined the patchouli-vanilla gourmand, with vanilla pulling the chocolate and praline facets out of a dark patchouli base.

A dense reading of vanilla absolute against pipe tobacco, cocoa


Coffee and white florals over a sweet vanilla base, a key reference for the modern sugary-vanilla



Tonka and vanilla driving a sweet masculine, with the vanilla giving the lavender-

Patchouli's earthy, slightly cocoa-like depth grounds vanilla's sweetness and built the modern gourmand category.
Tonka shares coumarin-hay facets with vanilla, doubling the creamy almond-tobacco effect in masculines and ambers.
Sandalwood's lactonic creaminess extends vanilla's softness into a longer, woodier dry-down.
Amber accords use vanilla as a key ingredient, fusing it with labdanum and benzoin for the classic resinous oriental base.
Vanilla has been used in perfumery since the Aztecs flavored cacao drinks with cured pods, but it entered European fine fragrance in earnest during the 19th century when Guerlain's Jicky (1889) introduced synthetic vanillin alongside the natural absolute. That pairing of raw material and lab molecule set the template for the modern oriental, and vanilla has anchored the base of ambery and gourmand compositions ever since. It appears across genders and concentrations, from bright florals where it adds a soft cushion to dense sweet ouds where it provides the main payload.
The note is a workhorse rather than a soloist. It rounds sharp edges, fixes volatile top notes, and gives a fragrance a recognizable comfort signal. Across the catalog, vanilla's most frequent partners are musk, sandalwood, jasmine, amber, bergamot, and damask rose — a profile that spans both classic florientals and contemporary sweet ambers. Patchouli and vanilla together built the modern gourmand category through Angel and its descendants, while tonka bean amplifies the coumarin-cream side for tobacco and fougère-adjacent blends. Cedar, mandarin, and orange blossom show up when perfumers want to lighten the load.
Vanilla suits wearers who want warmth and skin-close projection. It performs better in cold weather, where the resinous and balsamic facets read clearly, but lighter citrus-vanilla and floral-vanilla constructions work year-round.
Bergamot's bright citrus lift cuts vanilla's heaviness and is the standard opening for vanilla-forward compositions.
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Gritti
Siracusa
Parfum

Nuxe
Prodigieux - Le Parfum
Eau De Parfum

Montblanc
Legend Night

Prada
Prada L'Eau Ambrée

Mancera
Aoud Blue Notes
Eau De Parfum

Guerlain
Ambre Samar

Dolce & Gabbana
Devotion Intense
Eau De Parfum
Carner
Besos

Bond No. 9
New Haarlem

Editions de Parfums Frédéric Malle
Acne Studios par Frédéric Malle

Editions de Parfums Frédéric Malle
Une Fleur de Cassie

Aigner
Etienne Aigner Nº2
Eau De Toilette

Serge Lutens
Tubéreuse criminelle
Dusita
Erawan
Eau De Parfum

Tiziana Terenzi
Ursa
Parfum

Guess
Seductive Red
Eau De Toilette

Hanae Mori
HM
Eau De Parfum

Miller Harris
Scherzo
Eau De Parfum

Lattafa
Hayaati

Guerlain
Embruns d'Ylang

Theodoros Kalotinis
Alluring Fig

Celine
Nightclubbing

Chloé
Nomade Nuit d'Égypte

Zoologist
Koala