The Best Lavender Perfumes Are Slowly Taking Over My Spring Fragrance Wardrobe

The note is surprisingly versatile.

A woman wearing a lavender halter-neck top beside three bottles of perfumes that all feature lavender notes. All of these images are in front of a background that shows lavender flowers.
(Image credit: Getty/Sephora/Nordstrom)

When I initially started struggling with anxiety, I turned to aromatherapy to help me sleep through the night. Of course, lavender was one of the stars of the show, as it’s long been posited as a sleep aid that promotes deep relaxation. In a time when this country feels more politically charged than ever, perhaps that’s why interest in lavender perfumes has skyrocketed over the past few months.

“Lavender has a very classic, soothing, and comforting vibe,” senior perfumer at CPL Aromas, Julienne Rasquinet, tells me. “It’s traditionally a very masculine note and adds a lot of warmth to those types of scents, but lately we’ve seen feminine fragrances that have a fairly good amount of lavender in the formula as well. In those formulas, it creates something extremely cocooning, clean, and sensual.”

The note is also incredibly versatile. “Lavender can be camphoraceous (or medicinal and a little sharp), aromatic (herbaceous and spicy), floral, and even gourmand as it can be edible,” Rasquinet says. If any of those descriptors ring a bell for you, you may be more drawn to lavender perfumes than you realize.​

Of course, trying to find any new perfume to add to your collection can sometimes feel like you’re shooting in the dark, particularly when you want a specific note in the formula. This is where I step in. I've been trying some of the most highly-rated lavender perfumes on the market and have compiled a list of the ones that actually pleased my very critical nose. If you’re on the hunt for perfumes that will satisfy your lavender craving, keep reading for a curated list of my favorites.

Ariel Baker testing Le Labo Lavande 31

Ariel Baker testing Le Labo Lavande 31.

(Image credit: Ariel Baker)

Ariel Baker testing Parfum de Marly Haltane perfume.

Ariel Baker testing Parfum de Marly Haltane perfume.

(Image credit: Ariel Baker)

Ariel Baker testing YSL Libre Perfume.

Ariel Baker testing YSL Libre Perfume.

(Image credit: Ariel Baker)

Ariel Baker testing Burberry Goddess.

Ariel Baker testing Burberry Goddess perfume.

(Image credit: Ariel Baker)

Ariel Baker testing Valentino Uomo Born in Roma Purple Melancholia Eau de Toilette 

Ariel Baker testing Valentino Uomo Born in Roma Purple Melancholia Eau de Toilette.

(Image credit: Ariel Baker)

What Scents Go Well With Lavender Perfume?

As versatile as lavender is, you’re likely thinking that it could work across fragrance families—and you’d be right.

“Lavender is fantastic in classic fougere composition, which is typically more masculine, clean, and even a little woody,” Rasquinet says. “It also combines beautifully with citrus, geranium, oak moss, and even patchouli.” In short, lavender is one of those workhorse notes that can work well with virtually any other note, depending on the concentration used and the formula it’s included in. It can be sweet, it can be fresh, it can be floral—it all depends on the perfumer’s interpretation of the olfactive note and on your experience as a consumer.

So, if you’re someone who wants to level up your fragrance collection and move beyond the sugary, gourmand concoctions that have dominated the fragrance industry over the past two years, narrowing your search to lavender-inclusive fragrance may just put you on the right track to finding your newest go-to scent.

How Do I Find My Go-To Lavender Perfume?

My apologies in advance for sounding like a broken record, but there is only one way to really find your favorite lavender perfume on the market: Testing, testing, and more testing. For this note in particular, you’ll really want to give yourself time to get familiar with the different ways it’s used in formulas that run the gamut of the olfactive pyramid.

“I’ll start by saying that fragrance is completely subjective, so your favorite lavender perfume will be just that—yours,” Rasquinet says. “With that being said, there aren’t very many pure lavender fragrances that I can think of on the top of my head. So my suggestion is to look for lavender that is combined with notes that you already love.”

For example, if the fragrances that primarily make up your current collection have a through-line ingredient (they all have amber, or vanilla, or patchouli, etc., somewhere in the formula), there’s a good chance that you can narrow your search by looking for fragrances with that specific ingredient as well as lavender. Still, there’s no real rulebook for how you have to go about this search. As mentioned previously, the only thing you can really do is test to your heart’s content, which is exactly what makes the fragrance space so fun to begin with. The (well-scented) world of perfumery is truly your oyster.

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Meet the Expert

Julien Rasquinet headshot
Julien Rasquinet

Julien Rasquinet, Senior Perfumer at CPL Aromas France, has been captivated by the world of fragrance since he was just 14. His journey began with a business degree, but a transformative internship in New York ignited his passion for perfumery. Notably, he became the last student of the renowned perfumer Pierre Bourdon.

Ariel Baker
Beauty Writer

Ariel Baker is the Beauty Writer at Marie Claire. Previously the associate beauty editor at PS and briefly freelance, she has bylines in InStyle, Forbes Vetted, Women's Health, and more.

Since she started out in the non-profit sector, Ariel enjoys looking at beauty from a sociocultural lens, looking to avenues like politics, music, and the arts, to inform her views on the space. That being said, as a true beauty-product obsessive, testing the latest items to hit the market, keeping up with trends, and meeting industry icons, will always be her favorite part of working in the beauty space.

When she's not working, Ariel can be found hanging out with her fiancé and loving on their two cat daughters: Cow and Chicken.