These Coffee Perfumes Last Longer Than Your Morning Caffeine Fix
Editor’s note: Extrait de parfum is the most concentrated type of fragrance. It typically contains 20% to 40% fragrance oil while an eau de parfum has 15% to 20%—so it’s going to hit you harder. If you’re in the mood for something a tad lighter, Mind Game Prodigy (still an extrait de parfum) is a floral woody scent with a subtler coffee note, creamy caffe latte.
Key notes: blackcurrant, peony, Kona coffee, rose, wild violet, incense, myrrh, incense, panettone | Sizes: 3.4 oz
Best Budget: Sabrina Carpenter Me Espresso Eau de Parfum
Why we love it: Like an ice cream sundae you can inhale, Sabrina Carpenter’s gourmand Me Espresso is as addictive as one of her bops. When the chanteuse sings “Soft skin and I perfumed it for you” in the eau de parfum’s namesake song, one can only imagine her dancing around in a cloud of this feminine fragrance. In baby-blue packaging inspired by a candy bar, the budget-friendly scent is just the thing to cap off Carpenter-style curtain bangs, flushed cheeks, or any outfit littered with bright red lip prints.
Key notes: espresso bean, night-blooming jasmine, vanilla orchid, caramel, amber, whipped cream | Sizes: 2.5 oz
Meet the experts
- Sarah Horowitz-Thran, owner and chief perfumer of Sarah Horowitz Parfums in Newbury Park, California
How we test and review products
When Allure tests a product, our editors look at it from every angle to best serve you. We review ingredients, scrutinize brand claims, and, when necessary, examine peer-reviewed scientific and medical studies. In addition to testing each and every product that’s included in every review, we rely on experts who shape their fields, including dermatology, cosmetic chemistry, and medicine, to help us vet the ingredients and formulas.
For our list of the best fragrance-free body washes, we considered each product’s performance across five primary categories: product ingredients and efficacy, packaging, fragrance, texture, and product wear. Every product was determined to have excelled in each category by our editorial team, which is composed of in-house writers and editors as well as contributors — along with special consideration from board-certified dermatologists. To learn more information on our reporting and testing processes, read our complete reviews process and methodology page.
Our staff and testers
When Allure tests a product, our editors look at it from every angle in an effort to best serve you. We review ingredients, scrutinize brand claims, and, when necessary, examine peer-reviewed scientific and medical studies. In addition to testing each and every product that’s included in each and every review, we rely on experts who shape their fields, including dermatology, cosmetic chemistry, and medicine, to help us vet the ingredients and formulas.