Glossary · Vocabulary

House exclusives

House exclusives are perfume collections sold only through brand boutiques or the maison's official website, outside selective retail. A prestige tier above the main line, launched by Dior in 2004 and Chanel in 2007.

Definition

House exclusives, also called exclusives de marque or boutique exclusives, are perfume collections sold only through a maison's own boutiques or its official website, outside selective retail. They form a prestige tier above the main line, with higher prices, larger formats and bolder compositions. The format differs from limited editions, which are time bound, and from boutique exclusives tied to a single store.

Origin and history

The format was launched by Dior in 2004 with La Collection Privee, a trio of Bois d'Argent, Eau Noire and Cologne Blanche (source: Fragrantica). Chanel followed in 2007 with Les Exclusifs, launched by Jacques Polge against what he called the banalization of fragrance (source: Lampoon). The same year, Tom Ford opened the Private Blend. Hermes had set a marker in 2004 with Hermessence, Guerlain followed in 2005 with L'Art et la Matiere.

Use in perfumery

Four criteria recur: restricted distribution, limited to brand boutiques and official sites; a higher price grid, typically 300 to 800 euros per 100 ml against 100 to 200 for the main line; larger formats, often 200 to 500 ml; and bolder compositions, freed from mass market constraints.

The logic is strategic: reclaim a niche territory ceded to independents since the 1990s while building a prestige tier. The 2004-2015 period marks the format's democratization, later tied by critics to niche gentrification.

Sources

Published 4 June 2026 · Updated 4 June 2026 · Last fact check: 4 June 2026 · The Osmetheca Editorial Team