April 19, 2026
Perfume & AI: Would you let a robot choose your perfume?

Who – or rather what – will make the next Chanel No. 5? For centuries, fine fragrance has been the domain of highly trained perfumers, or ‘noses’, whose craft involves not just technical skill but deep intuition. Traditionally, launching a new scent would include hundreds of collaborators across conceptualisation, testing, sales, and formulation, and was a time-consuming and expensive process (hence the high price tag on many luxury perfumes). But now, with dramatic advances in AI, it’s never been easier for fragrance professionals, as well as novices, to go from idea to bottled reality, sometimes within minutes.

Proponents say AI not only cuts costs and democratises the field but also makes fragrances more sustainable, as climate change impacts natural resources, and with mounting ethical concerns around animal-derived scents, AI-driven synthetic alternatives offer a more accessible, potentially eco-friendlier path. AI also allows noses to experiment with hundreds of creative pairings, often at the push of a button.

However, others point out AI’s own environmental and ethical concerns, and raise worries over what happens to the artistry if we start reducing scent formulation to algorithms. But does it truly have to be a binary? Regardless of where you land, the future is here – and it looks a lot like AI.

Screen displaying use of Carto, with coloured circles on black background

Carto, which uses an ‘Odour Value Map’ to generate scents from over 5,000 rare or niche global ingredients

(Image credit: Courtesy of Givaudan)

Surprisingly, leading creatives are already embracing it. Calice Becker – VP Perfumer at Givaudan and creator of Dior J’Adore – helped develop and, in 2022, launched Carto. This AI-powered tool uses a massive ‘Odour Value Map’ to generate scents from over 5,000 rare or niche global ingredients. Called the ‘ChatGPT of fragrance development,’ Carto’s encyclopedic knowledge is said to be up to five times more comprehensive than a human perfumer, and is meant to craft rough ‘fragrance sketches’ to be expanded by human artists.

International Flavours & Fragrances (IFF) also recently launched its Science of Wellness programme, which combines decades of R&D with neuroscience data to design fragrances proven to enhance emotion. Paco Rabanne’s Phantom, for instance, was crafted using IFF’s ‘augmented creativity tool’ and neural data from over 45 million brain measures to track the emotional response to scent pairings.

bottles of perfume, a headset and a tablet screen

Scent-sation is an interactive shopping experience that matches products – in this case, a choice of YSL fragrances – based on your emotional responses, as gauged by an EEG-enabled headset

(Image credit: YSL Brainwave courtesy of L’Oréal and Emotiv)

To be competitive seems to be to experiment. Recently, YSL Beauty grabbed headlines when it partnered with EMOTIV brain-measuring software to bring EEG-enabled, scent-reactive headsets to global stores. Other fashion houses are also using augmentation for 21st-century facelifts. In 2024, Prada released Paradoxe Virtual Flower, utilising AI to reimagine its legendary Paradoxe line by tapping into its vast scent library.

‘With Virtual Flower, we are reinventing Paradoxe,’ explained Nadège Le Garlantezec, the brand’s perfumer. ‘My team and I used an artificial intelligence tool – for us, this was a way of pushing the limits of creativity,’ they say of their specialised system, which allowed for the mining of ‘new olfactory territories’ by suggesting compelling and unusual pairings.

Prada Paradoxe perfume and virtual flower

Prada Paradoxe Virtual Flower 

(Image credit: Courtesy of Prada)

Similarly, Givenchy’s Very Irresistible franchise was recently updated with AI and neuroscience, introducing a new ‘anti-morose’ rose extract to organically enhance moods. AI technology is also being adopted by smaller brands, including Dossier, known for recreating popular scents at a discount, which unveiled AInée, an algorithm blending AI with human perfumer expertise to offer personalised scent recommendations.

Some creators see this emerging technology as a bridge to new human experiences. At Atelier Jolie in New York City, until 7 June, visitors can experience a unique partnership between The Invisible Dog art museum and Everyhuman’s Algorithmic Perfumery.

Perfume making installation, with computer screen and metal rack full of liquid dispensers

Everyhuman’s Algorithmic Perfumery, in collaboration with The Invisible Dog art museum, at Atelier Jolie in New York City, until 7 June, transforms user data into customised scents

(Image credit: Courtesy of Every Human)

Stepping into the space that once housed artist Jean-Michel Basquiat’s studio, a system of glass vitrines and pipes is attached to a mobile scientific lab that offers an olfactory experience on demand. The brainchild of scent designer Anahita Mekanik and artist-technologist Frederik Duerinck, it transforms user data into customised scents.


link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *