Few ingredients in perfumery carry as much baggage as banana. The word alone tends to summon a specific olfactory memory, something synthetic, aggressively sweet, and vaguely reminiscent of candy that comes in a yellow wrapper. For most fragrance enthusiasts, that association has been enough to close the conversation before it starts.
TikTok has been reopening it. A simple question circulating across the platform, asking whether people actually like banana perfumes, has generated the kind of polarized response that tends to signal a trend is genuinely building. The replies split almost evenly between enthusiastic adoption and firm rejection, which in fragrance terms usually means something interesting is happening.
Why banana is being taken seriously now
The timing connects to a broader shift in how consumers approach scent. Gourmand fragrances, those built around edible notes like caramel, vanilla, and warm spices, have dominated the market long enough that a segment of fragrance buyers is now looking for something that sits outside the expected comfort zone. The fruit occupies a specific gap in that search. It reads as familiar enough to be approachable but has been stigmatized enough to feel genuinely unconventional.
Douglas Little, founder of Heretic Parfum, has pointed to the cultural pigeonholing of banana as childish and artificial as precisely the reason it is worth revisiting now. The fragrance market has a pattern of rehabilitating notes that were previously dismissed, and the fruit follows a similar arc to ingredients like leather and smoke that now anchor some of the most critically regarded contemporary perfumes.
The challenge with banana is technical as much as cultural. Creating a sophisticated scent requires working with the fruit’s distinct components separately, the waxy quality of the peel, the starchy density of the flesh, and the faint floral undertone that ripe banana carries beneath the sweetness. Balancing those elements against woods, salt, or spice without tipping into candy territory is where the formulation either succeeds or collapses.
The launches making the argument
Two recent releases have done more than any trend piece to shift the conversation around the fruit fragrance.
Ellis Brooklyn’s Isla Sirena uses blue java banana, a variety with natural vanilla undertones that distinguishes it from the standard fruit, alongside coconut water and lime. The result reads tropical and slightly salty rather than sweet, which repositions banana as a textural note rather than a dominant flavor. It is the kind of scent that takes several wears to fully place, which is not something most people expect from a fruit fragrance.
Juliette Has A Gun’s Banana Rush takes a different direction, pairing banana with maple syrup and sandalwood in a combination that has drawn positive responses from people who entered the experience expecting to dislike it. The sandalwood grounds the sweetness in a way that keeps the fragrance from reading as dessert, and the maple adds a dimension that moves it closer to something warm and evening-appropriate than to anything resembling a candy aisle.
How banana fragrances break down by profile
Not every banana scent is attempting the same thing, and the category is wide enough that different preferences can find a legitimate entry point.
Green and floral interpretations lean into the starchy, slightly vegetal quality of unripe banana, often pairing it with white florals and bergamot for something that reads sharp and fresh rather than sweet. Creamy and gourmand versions stay closer to the ripe fruit, building in lactonic warmth that evokes banana in a dessert context without becoming cloying when the formula is well-constructed.
Tropical profiles, like Isla Sirena, use the fruit as one element in a larger composition built around sun and salt. Toasted and boozy interpretations combine the fruit with rum, spice, and caramelized notes for something that wears with the weight of an evening fragrance and lingers accordingly.
What this trend is actually about
These perfumes are not asking to replace the classics. They are participating in a longer conversation about which ingredients deserve more considered treatment than they have historically received.
The most compelling banana fragrances currently available share a common quality. They use the fruit as a starting point rather than a destination, building complexity around it in ways that make it recognizable without making it the only thing the fragrance communicates. For anyone whose last encounter with banana scent was a body spray from two decades ago, the current landscape offers a genuinely different experience worth approaching without the prior assumptions.

