What is extrait de parfum, and is it worth it?
Extrait de parfum, also sold as parfum or pure parfum, is the most concentrated form of fragrance you can buy: typically 20 to 40 percent perfume oil, where an eau de parfum holds around 15 to 20 and an eau de toilette 5 to 15. The extra oil changes how the scent wears on skin, and what you pay per milliliter.
What changes against an eau de parfum
The common assumption is that an extrait is the same perfume turned up. In practice, houses rebuild the formula at that strength. An extrait wears closer to the skin, loses some sparkle up top, and trades it for a smoother, denser drydown. It often lasts longer, yet projects less than the eau de parfum carrying the same name. If you want the louder version, the EDP is regularly the one.
The label is a recipe, not a promise
Concentration tells you how much oil is in the bottle, not how the scent performs. Libre Le Parfum carries an eternal longevity rating on its product page, exactly what you would hope for at this strength. La Nuit de L'Homme Le Parfum is also a parfum, and its rating sits at weak. Same label, opposite outcomes. That gap is why we treat performance vocabulary separately in perfume longevity.
What it means when you buy
Extraits cost more per milliliter and usually come in smaller bottles. That math works when you wear a scent often and want the densest version of its character. If your goal is to be smelled across a room, look at the sillage rating instead; the label cannot promise that. A widely stocked example of parfum strength done right:
Hermès
Terre d'Hermes Parfum
from €76.79
/ 75ml
Vergelijk prijzen →
The full ladder from eau fraiche up to extrait is in the concentration guide; general technique lives in the perfume buying guide.
FAQ
Is extrait de parfum the same as parfum?
Yes. Parfum, pure parfum and extrait de parfum are label variations for the same top tier of concentration. Brands pick whichever reads best on the box.
Does extrait always last longer than eau de parfum?
Usually, not always. The oil percentage helps, but the materials matter more. Check the longevity rating on the product page rather than trusting the label.
Why are extrait bottles so small?
Because the liquid is mostly perfume oil rather than alcohol, a little goes further per spray, and a 100ml extrait would be priced out of reach for most buyers. 30 to 75ml is the normal range.
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