Baccarat Rouge 540 vs Bitter Peach
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Saffron opens sharp and slightly medicinal, then almost immediately dissolves into a warm, luminous blur of jasmine and amberwood — the signature move that made this famous. The heart is less floral than it sounds; the jasmine reads more as a sweetened airiness than a recognizable bloom. Dry-down is where it lives: cedar and fir resin ground a soft, skin-close amber that radiates rather than announces itself, with sillage that lingers in a room long after you've left — Fall and winter wearing, for anyone who wants to smell expensive without being loud about it.
Ripe, almost bruised peach opens with a boozy edge — rum and cognac push the fruit into fermented territory before blood orange sharpens things up. Cardamom and davana add a slightly medicinal, herbal twist through the heart, keeping heliotrope and jasmine from reading as floral. The dry-down is where it earns its reputation: deep vanilla, tonka, and benzoin layer over sandalwood and patchouli into something warm, resinous, and skin-close. Sillage is generous but not aggressive; projection softens after two hours into a luxurious, boozy-sweet trail — best worn in cold weather by anyone who wants a dessert fragrance with genuine edge.
How they overlap
Baccarat Rouge 540 and Bitter Peach share exactly one note (jasmine). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Baccarat Rouge 540 is the cheaper original at $325 compared to $395 for Bitter Peach — about 18% less. Both wear best across the same fall/winter — they're interchangeable on weather fit.