Glossary · Vocabulary

Niche gentrification

Niche gentrification names the commercial drift seen at certain niche perfumery houses after they were acquired by a major group. Compositions simplify, prices climb, and distribution spreads. The term has circulated among perfume critics since the late 2010s.

Definition

Niche gentrification names the commercial drift seen at certain niche houses after they were acquired by a major beauty group: compositions simplified toward accessible gourmands, prices raised without a perceptible quality gain, and ubiquity in airports and department stores. The term has circulated among Anglophone and Francophone critics since the late 2010s, by analogy with urban gentrification. It targets a house-by-house shift, not the niche segment as a whole.

Landmark examples

Four acquisitions anchor the debate. Le Labo and Editions de Parfums Frédéric Malle moved under Estée Lauder in 2014 (source: Business of Fashion). Maison Francis Kurkdjian joined LVMH in March 2017 (source: LVMH). Byredo was acquired by Puig in 2022 for a price reported around one billion euros. Le Labo's Santal 33 is the most cited symbol of the shift, a signature now ubiquitous from New York to Tokyo.

Symptoms and critique

Three recurring concerns: compositions simplifying toward accessible gourmands, prices climbing without better raw materials, and ubiquity that dilutes original scarcity. Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez argue in Perfumes The Guide 2018 that niche has become "as conformist" as mass-market fragrance (source: Persolaise). Victoria Frolova, at Bois de Jasmin, judges that the niche label "no longer means better." The counterargument exists: wider distribution, more stable reformulation budgets, and better-funded ethics. Niche gentrification differs from mainstreaming, which would target the entire segment.

Sources

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