
After several years of exceptional growth, fine fragrance is entering the second half of this decade in a position of renewed confidence, cultural relevance and creative momentum. What was once a category driven largely by heritage, celebrity and seasonal gifting has become a dynamic space shaped by shifting consumer values, digital culture and rapid innovation.
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After several years of exceptional growth, fine fragrance is entering the second half of this decade in a position of renewed confidence, cultural relevance and creative momentum. What was once a category driven largely by heritage, celebrity and seasonal gifting has become a dynamic space shaped by shifting consumer values, digital culture and rapid innovation.
Today’s scent consumers are not just buying fragrances; they are curating identity, mood, memory and meaning through fragrance. As premiumization continues and niche aesthetics influence the mainstream, fine fragrance is evolving into a more expressive, experimental and emotionally resonant category that’s driven by a committed global fragrance community – both from an industry and consumer perspective.
The Building of the Megatrend (but Nuanced) Gourmand Category
Social listening and sales data show us that consumers are building fragrance wardrobes and moving away from a one bottle signature scent to layering scents to create ultimate personalised scent signatures, and seeking deeper connections to the stories, ingredients and craftsmanship behind each bottle of juice. At the same time, technology, sustainability and data-driven insights from AI are changing how fragrances are formulated, marketed, and experienced.
As ever, there are many evolutionary and revolutionary trends driving the fragrance market - and as with any trend there is nearly always a parallel counter trend – we’ve seen beast mode versus skin scents gain traction in 2025, but this article discusses one of the strongest trend categories for 2026; gourmands. More than ever in 2026 taste and flavor will intersect with scent – so here’s a few strong trend signals and launches to watch as the category continues to be a market driver.
The Rise of Intelligent Gourmands
The “smell like a snack” trend will continue on social media, and vanilla will continue to have a core presence in consumers' perfume collections. The “ingredient” is entering a new era of elegance, dimension and unexpected contrast. No longer merely sweet, vanilla becomes multifaceted; be it mineral, salty, leathery, woody or luminous. Yes, this an era of neo gourmands, but don’t discount this core ingredient in future creations and trend mapping as consumers certainly aren’t discounting it in their fragrance purchases.
This past winter saw a host of new vanilla creations launches, including Ellis Brooklyn's Vanilla Man, which brought a spicy, aromatic masculinity to vanilla, whilst BDK Vanille Caviar added cacao richness and balsamic depth. Atelier des Ors Novae Vanilla radiated celestial minerality and mimosa glow and the YSL Libre line launched Vanille Couture which dresses vanilla in lavender, orange blossom and rum. This year the latest launch from Giorgio Armani; My Way Sunny Vanilla will be bringing pineapple and vanilla together.
Spinning off from the vanilla trend we delved into chocolate with Kayali Oudgasm
KAYALI's Oudgasm Chocolate Oud | 11 eau de parfum has notes of carmale apple, spiced rum and chocolate oud. Courtesy of KAYALI
Straight from the Dessert Cart
Further moving the gourmand needle are hyper-realistic pastry and dessert notes, with patisserie level detail and milky notes straight from the café menu embracing frothy sweetness and syrupy seduction.
Vietnamese brand D’Annam launched Mooncake as a scent of sweet nostalgia - a warm, golden crust giving way to a luscious centre of salted egg yolk. Snif recently launched Crumb Couture Almond, paying homage to the golden, buttery croissant inspired flakes of viral scent Crumb Couture but this time with almond cream, a croissant accord, powdered sugar, vanilla, buttery musks (butter will be a trend to watch) and creamy sandalwood. TOCCA recently released Laila, which marked the brand's first gourmand creation, with notes of green mandarin, bergamot, a desert rain accord, jasmine nectar, lily of the valley, cardamom blossom, toasted vanilla and white woods.
Fruit notes are often used in gourmand fragrances to blend scent and taste. RajuanaHussain at Adobe Stock
Gourmand Leans into the Tea Scene
Tea is bridging the 2026 gourmand gap from softly sweet to a more savory style of calm clarity. Transparent gourmands featuring matcha, steamed rice, milk, mochi or sugarcane fuse purity and indulgence as delicately dusted counterpoint to the continued vanilla addiction storytelling.
Prada is launching Infusion de Santal Chai this year with notes of cardamon, citrus, masala chai, spices, milk, sandalwood and musk. Phlur has launched a Matcha Milk Fragrance Mist where macadamia milk and vanilla swirl through the grounded calm of matcha, black tea, bergamot and musk. Overose Clean Matcha is a gourmand-leaning tea composition centred on a matcha accord. It opens with matcha wrapped in kuromitsu (Japanese brown sugar syrup), balanced by a clean-linen freshness, with blackcurrant buds, milk, vanilla mochi, marshmallow, musk and sea salt. Setchu’s Monday 9am Genmaicha features a blend of green tea and roasted popped brown rice, while adding uplifting bergamot, sweet cardamom and earthy vetiver.
Fruit Notes Become a Taste and Flavor Scent Fusion
In 2025 the “fruit” category in fragrance began to get a bit more exciting and as we head to 2030, we are going to see this category get a lot more nuanced. Partnered with a lot of fruit notes, oud began to give depth without creating heaviness to provide a new sophisticated edge to the olfactive category – but before we go deep on partner notes as that could be a whole article on its own, lets look at the ‘fruity’ landscape that’s evolving.
Obviously, cherry. You can’t dial down the effect cherry has had on the fruity olfactive landscape. YSL Black Opium Over Red was a bestselling cherry scent in Europe last year, and Phlur - the brand that is literally winning on social media - just launched a new cherry; Cherry Stem this winter with notes of black cherry, orange brandy, red freesia, sugared jasmine, plum nectar and soft leather.
Miutine by Miu Miu includes fragrance notes of wild strawberry, gardenia, brown sugar and vanilla.Courtesy of Miu Miu
The big launch of early spring 2026 though is the raspberry leaning YSL Libre Berry Crush, a new, fruity iteration of the original Libre, which opens with bright mandarin and tart raspberry, moving into fan favourite combination of lavender, vanilla and orange blossom that’s boosted by some coconut warmth.
Orange is having a new moment too. The ‘citrus positivity’ and sunshine factor have been turned up trend wise since 2022 – everyone needs the boost and consumers want fragrances that smell like sunshine year round. This year it’s rumored that Tom Ford will launch Taormina Orange with notes of blood orange, bitter orange, cardamom, orange blossom, oakmoss and patchouli. Armani Privé’s new fragrance Orange Méditerranée is a radiant citrus fragrance with a distinctive bitterness inspired by the Sicilian springtime sunrise, where vibrant and fresh bitter orange blends with sparkling cedrat and aromatic notes of fennel and tea accord capturing carefree sunshine moments.
So, whilst fruit isn’t the most traditional of gourmand categories - when we smell new fragrances designed by esteemed noses you can’t help but notice the flavor fusion angle that will be driving the category forward further in 2026 onwards.
A Few Final Thoughts on the 2026 Fragrance Landscape
In summary, new entries to the gourmand landscape will define 2026 but there is also a lot more happening. For example, the men’s fragrance sector will continue to boom as all generations are investing in scent for enjoyment and for the vibe – with indie, niche and male grooming brands already stepping up.
Affordable and accessible price points will be bringing more to the fragrance game as the body mist evolution continues. Hand in hand with that the layering revolution will continue apace – for example, Noyz have just launched their new fragrance milks spanning the skin care, fragrance longevity and layering space bringing in novelty but in a premium way. It’s definitely an exciting time to be in fragrance!










