United Arab Emirates vs Aoud
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Bergamot cuts through first — bright but fleeting — before jasmine and rose take over with a plush, powdery richness that reads more opulent than fresh. Pink pepper adds just enough edge to keep the floral heart from going soft. The dry-down is where the real weight lands: oud and patchouli build a dark, resinous base anchored by labdanum's warm amber depth, with musk extending the whole thing into a long, skin-close trail. Projection is confident without being aggressive — this wears like expensive fabric, not a statement. — Cold-weather evenings, formal occasions, anyone who wants to smell unmistakably luxurious without shouting it.
Opens with a dense, almost medicinal saffron-stained rose — vivid and slightly animalic before the oud anchors everything into dark, resinous territory. The heart is where it earns its price: rose and oud locked together in a smoky, leathery embrace that reads as genuinely opulent rather than synthetic. The dry-down softens through sandalwood and amber into a warm, skin-close finish with long-lasting sillage that still announces itself hours in — projection is bold for the first two to three hours, then intimate. — Cold-weather evenings, formal occasions, anyone who wears fragrance as a statement rather than an afterthought.
How they overlap
United Arab Emirates and Aoud share 2 notes (rose, oud). The same note name doesn't always mean the same scent — different houses use different vanillas, different woods, different musks — but a multi-note shared spine usually does indicate genuinely-comparable wear character. The remaining notes (6 unique to United Arab Emirates, 4 unique to Aoud) are where the divergence happens.
The buying decision
United Arab Emirates is the cheaper original at $515 compared to $560 for Aoud — about 8% less. Both wear best across the same fall/winter — they're interchangeable on weather fit.