Why the same perfume costs 60% more next door
The same bottle of perfume routinely costs two to four times more in one shop than another. The 100ml Terre d'Hermès EDT has sold for roughly four times its lowest price across the shops we track that deliver to the Netherlands, all on the same day. Same fragrance, same size, same factory; the live card below shows today's range. The gap has reasons, and none of them is counterfeiting.
Hermès
Terre d'Hermès
from €58.98
/ 100ml
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Where the gap comes from
Department stores and brand boutiques sell at the recommended price, which funds counters, testers and staff. Online perfumeries run on thin margins and high volume. Between them sits parallel import: the EU allows traders to buy genuine stock cheaply in one country and resell it in another, which is how a discounter can legally sit 50 percent under the boutique. Add currency swings, overstock clearances and old stock bought at last year's rates, and a wide, permanently moving spread is the natural state of the market.
The spread grows with exclusivity
Mass-market designer fragrances are price-checked by everyone, so competition squeezes the gap. Niche houses are the opposite: fewer sellers, less comparison, wilder spreads. The extreme in our catalog is Palatine, which has been listed at five times its lowest price for the same 75ml. Nobody should ever pay the top of that range.
Parfums de Marly
Palatine
from €179.00
/ 75ml
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What this means for you
Never judge a perfume's price by one shop, because there is no such thing as the price; there is a range, and where you land in it is up to you. Check the full range before buying, count shipping in the total, and treat a price far below the entire range from an unknown seller as a warning rather than a win: how to spot a fake explains that boundary.
FAQ
Is the cheap shop selling old or fake stock?
Usually neither. Parallel import and lower overhead explain most of the gap. You can verify age yourself with the batch code.
Why don't brands stop the discounters?
Inside the EU they largely can't. Once genuine goods are sold anywhere in the single market, resale is legal. Brands control their boutiques, not the open market.
When do prices drop?
Around Black Friday, after Christmas, and whenever a retailer clears overstock. Our weekly deals page tracks the verified drops.
More from the blog
Niche vs designer fragrance: what you pay for
What separates niche houses from designer brands, what the price gap buys, and when the upgrade is worth it. With real prices.
How to make perfume last longer
Moisturize, spray warm covered skin, use fabric for the tail hours and pick the right bases. The routine that doubles wear time.
Batch codes: check what you actually bought
Where to find a perfume's batch code, how to decode the production date, and what a match does and does not prove.