Golden light over a refined Parisian still life, evoking the citrus and floral signature of the Annick Goutal perfume house

House · French perfumery

Annick Goutal

French perfume house founded in 1981 in Paris (France) by Annick Goutal, a former pianist trained in Grasse under Henri Sorsana. Renamed Goutal Paris in 2017, known for Eau d'Hadrien (1981), Petite Cherie (1998) and Songes (2006).
Founded · 1981, Paris (France)
Founder · Annick Goutal
Status · Interparfums SA since March 2025

History of the house

Annick Goutal was founded in 1981 in Paris (France) by Annick Goutal, born in Aix-en-Provence (France) in 1945. First prize for piano at the Versailles Conservatory at sixteen, she abandoned a concert career and worked as a model in London before returning to Paris and pivoting to perfumery. The first boutique opened on Rue de Bellechasse, in the 7th arrondissement of Paris, and remains the historical address of the house today (Goutal Paris official history, The Perfume Society, accessed 2026-05-22).

The turn to perfumery followed a meeting in Grasse (France) with Henri Sorsana, a perfumer from the Robertet group. Annick Goutal trained under his tutelage for seven years before launching her own house, learning composition, raw material recognition and accord construction through direct apprenticeship rather than institutional schooling. Sorsana also signed Eau de Charlotte for the house in 1982 (Fragrantica designer page, The Perfume Society, Yakymour perfume history archive, accessed 2026-05-22).

The first releases came out the same year as the founding. Eau d'Hadrien, a citrus eau co-created with the perfumer Francis Camail, drew its name and atmosphere from Marguerite Yourcenar's novel Memoirs of Hadrian. Folavril, the founder's first signature, opened a green floral register with notes of tomato leaf. Eau d'Hadrien quickly became the founding signature of the house and remains the composition most cited by international fragrance press when documenting the early years of French niche perfumery (Fragrantica, Goutal Paris official history, accessed 2026-05-22).

In 1985, the perfumer Isabelle Doyen joined the house and became Annick Goutal's main collaborator on every subsequent composition. The duo of in-house perfumers held throughout the 1980s and 1990s, and signed major releases including Eau de Camille (1983), Passion (1983) and Petite Cherie (1998). The house was already positioned at the high end of the market, with selective distribution and an editorial discourse focused on personal memory and literary references, which contrasts with the mainstream launches of the period.

Annick Goutal died in 1999 at the age of fifty-three, after a battle with cancer. Her daughter Camille Goutal took over the artistic direction of the house in partnership with Isabelle Doyen. The duo has since signed several reference compositions, including Mandragore (2005) and Songes (2006), and has maintained the dual track of citrus eaux and floral compositions that defines the house catalogue (Now Smell This, Fragrantica designer page, accessed 2026-05-22).

Ownership changed hands several times. In 2005, the American investment fund Starwood Capital bought the brand from the founding family. In 2011, the South Korean cosmetics group Amorepacific acquired Annick Goutal from Starwood Capital, in what was its first foreign acquisition. In 2017, the house was renamed Goutal Paris as part of a wider rebrand of identity, packaging and bottle design, reported by WWD in October 2017. In March 2025, the French group Interparfums SA announced the acquisition of all worldwide intellectual property rights to Maison Goutal from Amorepacific Europe. Amorepacific Europe continues to operate the brand under license during a transition period, with Interparfums SA taking over from 2026. Camille Goutal remains involved in fragrance choices (Interparfums press release 17 March 2025, BeautyMatter, WWD, Premium Beauty News, accessed 2026-05-22).

Notable perfumes

The Goutal Paris catalogue spans more than forty compositions released since 1981. The eight perfumes below are documented with consistent attribution and launch year across Fragrantica, Parfumo and the Goutal Paris official archive, and structure the identity of the house.

YearPerfumePerfumerOlfactive family
1981Eau d'HadrienAnnick Goutal, Francis CamailCitrus eau
1981FolavrilAnnick GoutalGreen citrus
1982Eau de CharlotteHenri SorsanaFloral fruity gourmand blackcurrant
1983Eau de CamilleAnnick GoutalGreen floral
1983PassionAnnick GoutalWhite floral tuberose
1998Petite CherieAnnick Goutal, Isabelle DoyenFloral fruity pear
2005MandragoreIsabelle DoyenAromatic spicy
2006SongesIsabelle Doyen, Camille GoutalFloral oriental frangipani

Eau d'Hadrien (1981) is the founding composition of the house: a Sicilian lemon, grapefruit and cypress citrus eau co-signed by Annick Goutal and Francis Camail, inspired by the Marguerite Yourcenar novel. Petite Cherie (1998), signed with Isabelle Doyen, set the floral fruity pear template that the house refined for two decades. Songes (2006), signed by Isabelle Doyen and Camille Goutal, builds a white floral oriental around frangipani, ylang-ylang, tiare and jasmine on a vanilla base. Mandragore (2005) stands out for its aromatic spicy register, with black pepper, peppermint and star anise at the heart.

Olfactive signature

The olfactive signature of the house has held a stable axis since 1981: the French tradition of citrus eaux, anchored by Eau d'Hadrien and its variations. Goutal Paris works extensively with Sicilian lemon, bergamot, Calabrian citrus and grapefruit, in clear, luminous compositions with light persistence. This citrus family is the first recognisable marker of the house in French perfumery and is the entry point most cited by international fragrance press (Fragrantica, The Perfume Society, Now Smell This, accessed 2026-05-22).

A second axis covers floral fruity compositions carried by Petite Cherie (pear, rose, vanilla, musk) and white floral compositions such as Songes (frangipani, ylang-ylang, tiare, jasmine on a vanilla base). A third axis, less frequent, explores aromatic and spicy writing, with Mandragore (2005) as the most identifiable example, centered on black pepper, peppermint and star anise. These three axes coexist in the catalogue without one canceling the other, and feed the dual range of light eaux and dense floral compositions documented by Fragrantica and Parfumo.

On the production side, the house stands out for a continuous duo of in-house perfumers, Isabelle Doyen and Camille Goutal, a rare configuration in niche perfumery since the death of Annick Goutal in 1999. Goutal Paris is regularly cited in the international fragrance press as one of the pioneers of French niche perfumery, alongside Diptyque (1961) and L'Artisan Parfumeur (1976), and is consistently positioned in that lineage by reference sources covering the segment.

A founding house of French niche perfumery, recognized for its citrus eaux and white florals, with in-house perfumers across two generations.

Key characteristics

Signature materials
Sicilian lemon, bergamot, grapefruit, rose, pear, frangipani, vanilla, tuberose
Signature perfume
Eau d'Hadrien (1981), the founding citrus eau of the house
Structuring families
Citrus eau, floral fruity, white floral oriental, aromatic spicy
Distinctive trait
Pioneer house of French niche perfumery, duo of in-house perfumers across two generations since 1985

Frequently asked questions

When was Annick Goutal founded?01
Annick Goutal was founded in 1981 in Paris (France) by Annick Goutal, a former pianist trained in perfumery in Grasse (France) under Henri Sorsana, a perfumer from the Robertet group. The first boutique opened on Rue de Bellechasse in the 7th arrondissement of Paris, and the first two signed compositions, Eau d'Hadrien and Folavril, were released the same year.
Who composes the Goutal perfumes today?02
Since the death of Annick Goutal in 1999, creative direction has been led by her daughter Camille Goutal in partnership with Isabelle Doyen, who has been the in-house perfumer since 1985. The duo has signed most recent compositions, including Songes (2006) and Mandragore (2005). Goutal Paris is one of the few niche perfume houses with dedicated in-house perfumers.
Who owns the Goutal house today?03
In March 2025, the French group Interparfums SA acquired all worldwide intellectual property rights to Maison Goutal from the South Korean group Amorepacific, which had owned the brand since 2011. Amorepacific Europe continues to operate the brand under license during a transition period, with Interparfums SA taking over from 2026. Camille Goutal remains involved in fragrance choices.
When was Annick Goutal renamed Goutal Paris?04
The house was renamed Goutal Paris in 2017 as part of a wider rebrand of identity, packaging and bottle design, reported by WWD in October 2017. The rebrand was led under Amorepacific ownership and the brand still operates publicly under the Goutal Paris name.

Sources

Published 22 May 2026 · Updated 22 May 2026 · Last fact check: 22 May 2026 · Osmetheca