History
Honey has been part of scented preparations since antiquity. Egyptian, Greek and Roman texts describe honey-based unguents and balms, and beeswax was used as a fixative in solid perfumes well before distillation became routine. In modern Western perfumery, however, the honey accord as a distinct olfactive object only takes shape in the early twentieth century, once chemists isolate the phenylacetate esters that carry its sweet, slightly animalic character (Wikipedia, Honey; Wikipedia, Phenethyl phenylacetate, accessed 2026-05-26).
The first commercial honey notes appear in the 1920s, woven into oriental compositions. Habanita by Molinard (1921) is widely cited as the early reference for a honey-tobacco-vanilla architecture, and the note then surfaces in classical floral-aldehydic structures such as Jean Patou's Joy (1930, Henri Almeras) and Nina Ricci's L'Air du Temps (1948, Francis Fabron). In each case, honey acts as a warming hinge between flowers, balsams and powdery musks (Fragrantica, Honey note page; Now Smell This, accessed 2026-05-26).
The contemporary niche perfumery turn for honey starts in the mid-2000s, when several niche houses push the accord toward its more carnal, indolic territory. Miel de Bois by Serge Lutens (2005, Christopher Sheldrake) and Absolue Pour Le Soir by Maison Francis Kurkdjian (2010) anchor the modern honey idiom: warm, dense, indolic, sometimes deliberately polarizing. The note has since become a recurring tool in oriental and gourmand-animalic niche writing.
Chemical origin
Honey in perfumery is almost never a single ingredient. It is a reconstructed accord, assembled from several synthetic molecules and one or two naturals. The two backbone materials are both phenylacetate esters. Phenethyl phenylacetate (CAS 102-20-5) is a colourless to pale yellow liquid with a sweet, honey-rose odour, often described as the closest match to acacia honey on smelling strips (PubChem, CID 7717; Good Scents Company, accessed 2026-05-26). Methyl phenylacetate (CAS 101-41-7) is sharper, more floral, with a clear honeyed character used as a top-note booster (PubChem, CID 7464).
Around these two esters, perfumers layer beeswax absolute, a natural extract of bee honeycombs that contributes a waxy, hay-like, slightly animalic facet and strong fixative power. Hedione (methyl dihydrojasmonate, CAS 24851-98-7), a Firmenich captive launched in 1962, brings transparency and a green-floral lift that prevents the accord from turning flat. Gamma-decalactone (CAS 706-14-9) adds a creamy, peach-like sweetness reminiscent of comb honey (Givaudan technical sheet, Hedione; Perfumer & Flavorist magazine, lactones in gourmand compositions).
Smaller amounts of methyl anthranilate (orange-blossom honey facet), indole (animalic depth), vanillin (pastry warmth) and cis-3-hexenyl acetate (pollen-fresh top) complete the formula. The exact ratios are proprietary; major industrial honey bases include Givaudan's Honey Givco, Firmenich's Honey accord and IFF's Mielessence, all sold as ready-to-use captives to fine-fragrance perfumers (industrial trade press; Perfumer & Flavorist, accord reconstructions).
Production and extraction
The synthetic backbone of the honey accord is produced industrially through routine esterification routes. Phenethyl phenylacetate is obtained by reacting phenylacetic acid with phenylethyl alcohol under acid catalysis, then purified by vacuum distillation (PubChem; Good Scents Company technical entry, accessed 2026-05-26). Methyl phenylacetate follows the same logic, with methanol replacing phenylethyl alcohol. Both are commodity captives, manufactured at large scale by Givaudan, IFF, Firmenich and Symrise, with kilogram prices in the low hundreds of euros.
The natural side of the accord is dominated by beeswax absolute. Beeswax is first separated from honeycombs by gentle melting, washed and refined into yellow blocks. The blocks are then submitted to solvent extraction (typically hexane or ethanol), followed by alcohol washing to remove the lipid fraction. The yield is low, around 0.5 to 2 percent depending on grade, which explains a wholesale price often quoted above EUR 800 per kilogram for premium qualities. Producers are concentrated in Spain, Hungary, France and Morocco (industrial trade press; Eden Botanicals beeswax absolute technical sheet).
True honey absolute also exists. It is obtained by solvent extraction of selected monofloral honeys, primarily acacia, lavender and orange-blossom from Provence (France), Hungary and Spain. The yield is below 0.1 percent of honey weight, and 2025-2026 trade quotes commonly sit above EUR 6,000 per kilogram, with premium grades exceeding EUR 10,000 per kilogram (Première Peau supplier index; Atelier des Sens trade reports). Because of this cost, honey absolute appears almost exclusively in high-end niche compositions, where a few drops are used to deepen the synthetic accord.
From a regulatory standpoint, the honey accord itself carries no major IFRA restriction. Among its components, methyl anthranilate is limited to moderate concentrations for sensitization reasons under IFRA Standard 51st Amendment, and indole is capped in leave-on applications. Phenethyl phenylacetate, methyl phenylacetate, hedione and gamma-decalactone are not significantly restricted in 2026 (IFRA Standards Library, accessed 2026-05-26).
Olfactive profile
Honey in perfumery offers a sweet, warm, slightly animalic profile. Blind, it is recognized by a three-part architecture: a floral-honeyed opening reminiscent of acacia or orange-blossom honey, a waxy, beeswax-toned heart with hints of hay and rolled tobacco, and a balsamic, slightly indolic drydown that can tilt toward urinous and carnal at higher concentrations (Bois de Jasmin, accessed 2026-05-26; Now Smell This honey reviews).
The sweet / animalic polarity of the accord explains its split reception. At low dosage (0.5 to 3 percent of a formula) honey reads as comforting and gourmand, a warm rounding agent that softens the harder edges of orientals. Pushed above 5 percent, especially when paired with indole and orange-blossom, it acquires a carnal, almost feral edge that some readers describe as urinous. Miel de Bois (Serge Lutens, 2005) sits openly on the carnal side, and its divisive reception has become a reference case in modern niche perfumery (Persolaise reviews; Cafleurebon, accessed 2026-05-26).
Key characteristics
Notable perfumes featuring honey
Six compositions return regularly in specialised English-language press as benchmarks for the honey note in modern niche perfumery. The selection spans 2005 to 2018 and shows the full range of the accord, from sweet gourmand to overtly indolic-animalic readings.
| Year | House | Perfume | Role of honey |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | Serge Lutens | Miel de Bois | Christopher Sheldrake. Soliflore honey on cedar and beeswax; cult reference and divisive carnal reading of the note (Fragrantica; Persolaise). |
| 2010 | Maison Francis Kurkdjian | Absolue Pour Le Soir | Francis Kurkdjian. Honey, cumin and incense; dense oriental built on a carnal honey core (Fragrantica; Now Smell This). |
| 2012 | CB I Hate Perfume | Black March (Beeswax accord) | Christopher Brosius. Beeswax-honey reconstruction in the CB I Hate Perfume range, contemplative reading of the note (CB I Hate Perfume catalogue; Persolaise). |
| 2013 | Marc Jacobs | Honey | Annie Buzantian and Yann Vasnier. Mainstream gourmand-honey reading; pear, honeysuckle and stone fruit on a sweet honey base (Fragrantica). |
| 2014 | Amouage | Beach Hut Woman | Daniel Maurel. Honey-coconut accord paired with sea salt and tobacco, oriental beachside reading (Fragrantica; Persolaise). |
| 2018 | Montale | Wild Honey | Pierre Montale. Honey, oud and incense; carnal oriental signature in the Montale catalogue (Fragrantica; Now Smell This). |
Frequently asked questions
Sources
- Wikipedia: Honey (accessed 26 May 2026)
- Wikipedia: Phenethyl phenylacetate
- PubChem: Phenethyl phenylacetate (CID 7717)
- PubChem: Methyl phenylacetate (CID 7464)
- Fragrantica: Honey note reference page
- Basenotes: Honey raw material entry
- Good Scents Company: phenethyl phenylacetate technical entry
- IFRA Standards Library, methyl anthranilate and indole restrictions
- Now Smell This: niche honey reviews (Miel de Bois, Absolue Pour Le Soir)
- Bois de Jasmin: honey-tobacco-cumin readings in niche perfumery