With all the fruity floral perfumes on the market, it can be challenging to pull out specific olfactory notes that draw you in time-and-time again. As a beauty editor, I’ve trained my nose to recognize several of the ones that I love whether they’re taking center stage or hiding behind a collection of other equally enchanting notes. While my love affair with lychee predates my time as a journalist, I’m constantly discovering new ways to wear it as new perfumes featuring the fruity note hit the market. There’s something about lychee that I find ridiculously chic, so its my top pick for elevating any look (Yes, it’s that easy).
Keep reading to learn everything you’ve ever wanted to know about the note from a perfumer who was behind on of this season’s best new lychee additions to my collection, then discover the 14 other fragrances I’ve been reaching for on repeat backed by five-star reviews. Who knows? You may find yourself just as obsessed with lychee scents as I’ve become over my four years on the job.
How is lychee used in perfumery?
Although you may have snacked on lychees on a hot summer day, or lazily sipped on a lychee martini during a night out, wearing perfumers with the luscious note is a unique experience. Perfumer Patrica Choux explains that the note is beautiful in perfumer because it brings an immediate sense of brightness and vitality. “It has a juicy, almost effervescent quality, but with more delicacy and transparency than many traditional fruit notes,” Choux says. She tells us that where many fruity notes in fragrances can feel very ‘direct’ or candied, lychee possesses a more refined character.
According to Choux, lychee has the ability to, “give a fragrance a radiant, joyful opening while still feeling airy, polished, and modern.” She adds that it most naturally finds itself in fruity florals (especially in juicy compositions that could benefit from its freshness, color, and uniquely luminous texture. “I also love it in rose fragrances, because lychee can make a floral heart feel more vivid, dewy, and alive rather than overly classic or formal,” continues Choux.
Which notes pair well with lychee?
When it comes to identifying notes that pair nicely with lychee, rose is at the top of Choux’s list. “There is something very seamless about that combianation because lychee already has a soft floral tonality within its juices, and rose gives it depth, elegance, and shape,” she explains. Choux also raises peony and other translucent florals as ideal for blending with lychee, as they preserve the feeling of freshness and fluidity. Additionally, the perfumer tells us lychee works well with other fruit notes, for building dimension. Watery or textured fruits work particularly well for this.
Choux also loves to use musk in her lychee-forward blends, because they allow the brightness of lychee to settle into something, “more intimate and skin-like.” In one of the newest lychee perfumes she worked on, Henry Rose’s Ripe Eau de Parfum ($120), she highlights its contrasts between the juicy opening, air floral heart, and soft, musky-wood base that was important to deliver the overall effect.
How was Henry Rose’s lychee scent created?
Henry Rose’s aforementioned newest fragrance, Ripe Eau de Parfum, was created by Choux. Through the development process, she was interested in, “capturing the suspended moment of summer when everything feels full of life.” Choux explains she wanted the scent to open with something immediate and luminous. “Lychee felt especially compelling because it brings a sense of juicy freshness without losing sophistication,” she continues. “The development process was really about finding the right balance between a vibrant opening and a softness the still felt polished and elegant.” The end result? A new perfume to add to my lineup that offers a mouthwatering and luminous take on lychee.
If you’re interested in taking a close look at the 15 most irresistible perfumer and beauty editor-approved lychee perfumes, you’ll want to keep scrolling. Below, find the best bright, sparkling, and modern takes on the classic fruity note.
The Best Lychee Perfumes, Listed
Nest New York
Lychee Rose Eau de Parfum
Scent Type: Fruity floral | Notes: Rose absolute, lychee, effervescent pink champagne, raspberry
Choux co-created Nest New York’s refreshing Lychee Rose Eau de Parfum with French perfumer Mathilde Bijaoui. “It stands out to me for the way the lychee feels especially vivid and sparkling in the composition, bringing a juicy brightness that immediately draws you in,” she explains. Choux highlights the blends use of rose, which she shares allows it to, “take on a more elegant and expressive character,” allowing this fragrance to feel both joyful and refined.
Customer Review: “On first spritz, it’s fresh, floral, and juicy with a distinctly red, juicy berry undercurrent within the citrusy rose in the base. There’s a musk note in the base that I can’t put my finger on, but it helps to support the scent and keep it light, fresh, and bright rose [and] lychee. It’s not deep or jammy and mulled. It’s completely fresh and bright, even youthful without being immature. It does not change much with my skin composition, and it lasts all day really nicely.”
The 7 Virtues
Candied Lychee Eau de Parfum
Scent Type: Fruity floral | Notes: Lychee, peony, orange, vanilla, crystal amber
Many lychee scent that have recently hit the market feel more warm and skin-like, but that doesn’t mean candied lychee scents haven’t caught my eye. This one, by the 7 Virtues, offers sugary pink lychee combined with a splash of juicy orange. The duo is softened with the powdery freshness of peony grounded in vanilla and crystal amber for a long-lasting fragrance that radiates positivity. Fruity and flirty, this perfume reminds me of peach rings and other the other super sweet candies of my childhood.
Customer Review: “Candied Lychee is honestly my favorite affordable lychee perfume. It’s so fun, juicy, and a little floral and works perfectly from day to evening. The sillage is insane and people have told me they could smell me just walking past them. I’ve found that many brands pair lychee with rose which can overpower the fruit, but 7 Virtues added peony instead and created this sweet, fruity floral with a creamy vanilla dry down that I absolutely love.”
Kayali
Eden Sparkling Lychee | 39 Eau de Parfum
Scent Type: Fruity floral | Notes: Blackcurrant, Italian lemon, sparkling lychee, red apple, rose damascena, candied violet, jasmine sambac, sugared amber, cedarwood, musk, vanilla absolute, sandalwood
When combined with crisp red apple, candied violet, sugared amber and bright Italian lemon, lychee can take on a sparkling quality as featured in Kayali’s Eden Sparkling Lychee | 39. The perfume’s take on the timeless note offers a luscious blend of super sweet fruits paired with equally bright florals for a radiant, cheerful composition. By using blackcurrant as an opening note, the perfume is balanced with a tart, modern edge.
Customer Review: “I get a really pretty mixed fruit scent with this. It’s bright, fruity, sweet, juicy, a little tangy, and has a touch of citrus. As it dries down I do get just a very soft scent of the Violet and jasmine sambac, but I don’t pick up on the rose at all. It stays very fruity throughout the whole wear, but after the dry down I do also get some sugar, vanilla, and warm golden amber as well as just a subtle musk and just a whisper of sandalwood.”
Henry Rose
Ripe Eau de Parfum
Scent Type: Fruity floral | Notes: Lychee, watermelon sorbet, green leaves, cardamom, black pepper, jasmine, peony, rose water, wisteria, upcycled orcanox, soft woods, musks, creamy sandalwood
Choux says Henry Rose’s Ripe Eau de Parfum, was uniquely crafted to create an impression of light, color, and energy with a pulpy burst of lychee. “It gave the top note a mouthwatering vividness, but still enough transparency to melt naturally into the floral heart,” she explains. “That was important to me, because I did not want the fruit to feel separate from the rest of the composition. I wanted it to flow directly into the rose and peony, so the whole fragrance would feel seamless, radiant, and alive.”
Customer Review: “Henry Rose Ripe Eau de Parfum is a beautiful fruity floral that feels bright and uplifting from the first spray. It opens with a juicy, fresh sweetness that gives a soft, watery, almost sorbet-like vibe. As it settles, it becomes smoother and more delicate with a light floral touch, while the base keeps it clean and slightly warm. It’s playful but still refined, and not overwhelming at all. Perfect for everyday wear, especially in warmer seasons when you want something fresh, feminine, and a little sweet.”
(Image credit: Courtesy of Maya Thomas)
Chloé
Chloé Eau de Parfum
Scent Type: Fresh floral | Notes: Peony, rose petals, freesia, lychee, magnolia, cedar, ambergris
I like to think of Chloés perfumes as the keepers of every elegant, airy, and lush olfactory blend my heart desires, and this classic perfume is the best example of that. While lychee is at the heart of Chloé Eau de Parfum, it opens with delicate peony and rose petals before shifting into a juicy, fruit heart and leveling out with a glowing woods and amber. I’m in love with the romantic blend of soft florals—the whisper of freesia in this is too dreamy.
Customer Review: “This is for those that want peace and quiet, the gentle cleanliness of a tried-and-true luxury bar of soap, and a nice cup of tea. She’s not here to make a statement with her actions, her existence is all that is needed. The only thing that matters is that she was made to last; not on your skin, but in your mind, along the classics. The lychee makes the freesia and rose notes appear more alive, more…young and delicate. It will give a sense of freshness, until the cedar and amber come around, for the final round.”
d’Annam
Princess of China Eau de Parfum
Scent Type: Fruity floral | Notes: Peony, white lotus, silk, lychee, pear
You’ve never known a decadent lychee blend like d’Annam’s Princess of China Eau de Parfum. Drawing inspiration from noblewoman of China’s dynasties past, here’s an olfactory composition celebrates history with a blend of dewy peony entwined with velvety white lotus and luxurious silk against a base of delectable lychee and crisp pear. This one lasts 6-8 hours on the skin with impressive projection. In other words, you can expect to feel like royalty while wearing it.
Customer Review: “I discovered this fragrance in the [d’Annam] discovery box and completely fell in love with it! It’s an incredibly feminine scent, with a soft, fresh femininity. Delicately floral and extremely elegant, it’s gentle enough for everyday wear but also perfect for a date. The fragrance lasts beautifully on the skin, and by the end of the day it becomes more intimate—it projects less but leaves the skin delicately scented. In short, this perfume truly lives up to its name and makes you feel like a princess.”
Guerlain
Aqua Allegoria Rosa Rossa Eau de Toilette
Scent Type: Fruity floral | Notes: Rose, mandarin, blackcurrant, lychee, peony, sandalwood
Guerlain definitely knows a thing or two about capturing the magic and effortless romance of a fruity floral scents, and Aqua Allegoria Rosa Rossa Eau de Toilette continues the legacy in a lighthearted a joyful ode to rose. Enhanced with fruity, sparkling of blackcurrant and lychee, this one opens with delicate rose blossoms against a creamy and fresh base of sandalwood. The mandarin tucked between rose and blackcurrant adds a magnetic and bright twist.
Customer Review: “Rosa Rossa is not the classic ‘dusty’ or ancient rose; it is a dewy rose, made sparkling by the fruit. The first spray is an explosion of joy. The lychee and blackcurrant give an aquatic and slightly acidic sweetness, while the citrus fruits (bergamot and lemon) clean the air, making the onset very fresh. Here the rose meets the peony. This combination creates an airy and transparent floral effect. It is not an opulent rose, but a young rose, almost as if you are smelling the flower directly from the stem. The closure is soft thanks to the white musk and woods.”
Diptyque
Eau Rose Eau de Toilette
Scent Type: Fruity floral | Notes: Rose Damascena, rose centifolia, lychee accord
While this one is generally described an a fruity floral, I consider it to be the ideal watery rose scent brightened with a refreshing lychee accord. Diptyque’s Eau Rose Eau de Toilette is built around a delicate rose note that, with patience, unfurls to reveal green leaves and luscious buds. It possesses both fruity and green accents composed with a fusion of two types of roses. It’s one of the more photorealistic rose perfumes I’ve come across, but I believe the garden-like scent is heightened with the addition of lychee.
Customer Review: “A playful, natural, sweet and musky rose, seems to suit many moods and seasons. I don’t perceive the linearity that some people do, I find it starts quite fruity, tart and green, very bergamot-y, but with a distinct dew-covered garden rose which floats the scent gently, through a patch of surprisingly pleasant geranium, into a gorgeous musky honey in the dry down. A few hours in it smells almost more gourmand than floral thanks to the honey note, but it is never offensively sweet.”
D.S. & Durga
Cowgirl Grass Eau de Parfum
Scent Type: Aromatic floral | Notes: Bergamot peel, lychee, pink geranium, peony, jasmine water, flowering grass, vetiver, amber crystals, musk
The Cowboy Carter tour may be a thing of the past, but I’m still embracing my inner cowgirl with the help of this D.S. & Durga fragrance. If the playful design of it’s bottle already won you over, you’ll be instantly transported to grassy plains of America’s west with this aromatic floral blend. After being introduced to the scent with bright bergamot peel and lychee, it reveals a blooming floral bouquet at its heart grounded by notes of flowering grass and jasmine water. Its base, a blend of amber crystals and musks, offers a warm, leather-like finish.
Customer Review: “Tart peony, lychee and rosehip tea with an underlay of dry grass, hay, and windy plains. Not at all sweet. Instead natural and strangely peaceful. It’s a spacious fragrance, and captures that feeling of re-engaging with nature after too many days spent semi-dissociated in the city grind. Love this one.”
Ex Nihilo
Lust In Paradise Eau de Parfum
Scent Type: Woody floral | Notes: Pink pepper, rosyfolia, petalia, lychee, rose absolute, musk, white cedarwood, ambrox
Some of my favorite lychee blends are irresistibly sensual. Ex Nihilo’s Lust In Paradise, for example, combines captivating pink pepper tinged with fresh lychee and rose absolute for an ethereal blend to capture the magic of sunny afternoons spend lounging next to the Mediterranean Sea. Its radiant florals are blended with creamy woods and a second-skin musk for a hypnotic mix that smells like being whisked away on a late summer, Italian getaway.
Customer Review: “I have tried hundreds of niche perfumes, but this one is my favorite and the only one that I use. There is nothing like it, even remotely. This is the smell of happiness, hope, fresh bright spring light, youth, and beauty. I wear it all year around. This is the only perfume that doesn’t give me a headache. Very beautiful, feminine, modern. Also very long-lasting.”
(Image credit: Courtesy of Maya Thomas)
Parfums de Marly
Delina Eau de Parfum
Scent Type: Woody floral | Notes: Bergamot, lychee, rhubarb, damascena rose, nutmeg, cashmeran, musks, vetiver
Remember when Choux mentioned how nicely lychee blends with pulpy fruits? Parfums de Marly’s Delina Eau de Parfum masters the mixture by adding bright bergamot as its opening note. Its delicate floral heart beats with a garden-inspired blend of rhubarb and Damascena rose eventually warmed with smooth cashmere and sheer musks. While my nose doesn’t pick out the vetiver, it certainly detects the dash of nutmeg that offers an inviting warmth to the blend.
Customer Review: “To me, rose scents usually smell too mature and too strong; they’re what most people think of when you say ‘perfume.’ Delina, however, sets itself apart with its opening: the litchi, rhubarb, and bergamot work together to make it a tangy and fresh scent while the rose lingers underneath. The rose feels like a component of the fragrance rather than overpowering. I do detect the musk as well, which compliments the rose and peony nicely, and the cedar grounds the fruity aspects so that the fragrance doesn’t feel juvenile.”
Ex Nihilo
Fleur Narcotique Eau de Parfum
Scent Type: Fruity floral | Notes: Bergamot, lychee, peach, petalia, orange blossom, jasmine, musk, transparent wood, moss
Another Ex Nihilo fragrance I can’t get enough of is the Fleur Narcotique Eau de Parfum. Leaning more floral than fruity, the mix of lychee and peach adds a cold and energetic twist that doesn’t take away from the luscious orange blossoms or jasmine. It also features musk and transparent wood, both which come across as clean and elegant. It’s fresh take on lychee that feels like a remastered, modernized interpretation of the note.
Customer Review: “Fleur Narcotique isn’t a wild garden—It’s a floral utopia under glass and sterilized steel. Everything is where it’s meant to be with neat precision. Aesthetically perfect peach and lychee’s open, with sweet florals of peony and jasmine. A clean hum of musk and pale wood preserves the cool air, like a climate-controlled dome. There are synthetic overtones which makes this feels very deliberate and tinkered with.”
Bond No. 9 New York
Greenwich Village Eau de Parfum
Scent Type: Warm floral | Notes: Cassis, lychee, mandarin, peony white firbest, waterlily, jasmine petals, ambrox, peach musk, vanilla, oak moss, praline
Capturing one of New York City’s most vibrant neighborhoods in a bottle, Bond No. 9’s Greenwich Village celebrates the creativity and individuality of its unique inhabitants with a masterful blend of spiced vanilla and airy florals sharpened with crisp cassis and the rose-like, floral presence of lychee. When I wear this on my skin, the lychee is the start of the show, but on my clothes, I notice peony much more: bright, powdery, and fresh.
Customer Review: “This is a bright, tropical, musky escape that’s a vibrant, crowd-pleasing stunner. The opening hits with a bold burst of citrus and alcohol that can be a bit harsh at first, but quickly mellows into a tart, zingy sweetness. As it softens, the lychee really starts to shine, giving the fragrance a sweet, juicy, aquatic character. Despite fresh being the main accord, I get more tropical-fruity-musk than purely fresh. The floral notes add depth and roundness, keeping the scent from becoming too linear.”
Scent Type: Floral gourmand | Notes: Lychee, lily-of-the-valley, white saffron, pink pepper, marshmallow, bergamot caramel, white birch, aged cognac, ambergris
House of Bō Founder and Creative Director Bernado Möller wanted the perfume to pay homage to the sensuality of his favorite flower, Lily-of-the-Valley. Here’s an indulgent blend of elegant florals and sophisticated woods opens with delicate and crisp blooms that are swirled with a flirty pink pepper, marshmallow, and bergamot caramel heart. Its lustrous base boasts a delightful mix of white birch, aged cognac, and ambergris.
Customer Review: “From the House of Bo’s Bombón is my favorite hands down. The florals, and bright citrus are warmed and softened with lychee, caramel and marshmallow. It’s sweet while not being cloying, as the scent profile leans bright and fresh over sweet. The saffron and pink pepper anchor the sweetness with a leathery, earthy facet, creating even more balance.”
Loewe
Un Paseo Por Madrid Prado Eau de Parfum
Scent Type: Aromatic fruity | Notes: Chamomile, clary sage, cassis, lychee
If sweet, fruity floral fragrances aren’t what your gravitate towards, but you still love lychee, consider trying this severely underrated scent created by Loewe. Un Paseo Por Madrid Prado captures the multi-layered culture of Madrid, the brand’s home city, with an unforgettable blend of chamomile and clary sage (both known for their slightly woody, aromatic character) swirled with tart cassis and indulgent lychee.
Customer Review: “This was fruity but the chamomile adds some depth to it. Almost musky. It’s not like bright and fresh fruit but dried fruit. It wouldn’t be terrible in hot weather, but it might be a little heavy. I wouldn’t really consider it a fresh scent. It is really unique though and worth trying if you like tea scents, especially chamomile.”
How I Chose
As with all of our buying guides at Who What Wear, we compile our edits based on original testing and expert recommendations. To identify the 15 best lychee fragrances on the market from brands such as Henry Rose, Diptyque, and Parfums de Marly, I looked to perfumer insights and tapped into my knowledge as a beauty expert. I also considered several crucial factors, including sillage, fragrance complexity, and packaging. I’m aware of how important these factors are for a wide range of preferences, so I made sure to list out all the helpful details. Of course, customer reviews were also kept in mind when creating this list.
Why Trust Who What Wear
At Who What Wear, we know that beauty isn’t one-size-fits-all. Over the years, our editors have tested thousands of products—including skincare, makeup, haircare, and nails—while also working closely with trusted experts, like renowned dermatologists, celebrity makeup artists, and other leading industry insiders. Together, this ensures every guide is well-researched, inclusive, and relevant to you.
We focus on formulas that deliver, whether they’re affordable favorites or luxury investments. Our product selection is based on tangible results, ingredient know-how, and what we’d truly recommend to our closest friends and family members.
