Men

Allure Homme Sport Superleggera

Marca
Chanel
Olivier Polge
Perfumista
Olivier Polge
4.23 de 5
1,506 votos

Acordes principales

Descripción

Chanel Allure Homme Sport Superleggera is an aromatic woody fragrance creation designed for men. Launched in 2024, this new scent was conceived by perfumer Olivier Polge. Its olfactive structure unfolds with citrus top notes featuring mandarin and grapefruit; a woody heart where cedar takes prominence; and a base composed of white musk, amber, patchouli, and sandalwood.

Resumen rápido

Cuándo llevarla (votos)

  • Invierno 7.2%
  • Primavera 35%
  • Verano 37%
  • Otoño 21%
  • Día 72%
  • Noche 28%

Notas clave

Comunidad

1,506 votos

  • Positivo 80%
  • Neutral 11%
  • Negativo 8.7%

Pirámide olfativa

Estructura completa de la fragancia: de la salida al fondo.

Salida 3 notas
Corazón 2 notas

Comunidad

Qué dicen los usuarios sobre propiedad, preferencia y mejor momento de uso.

Propiedad

¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?

Uso recomendado

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Características

Resumen de votos sobre longevidad, estela, género y percepción de precio.

Longevidad

Escasa

Débil

Moderada

Duradera

Muy duradera

Estela

Suave

Moderada

Pesada

Enorme

Género

Femenino

Unisex femenino

Unisex

Unisex masculino

Masculino

Precio

Extremadamente costoso

Ligeramente costoso

Precio moderado

Buen precio

Excelente precio

Reseñas

Experiencias reales de la comunidad sobre uso diario, rendimiento y estela.

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40 reseñas

Mostrando las más recientes primero.

  • Agree with the previous review. It’s a disappointment that Chanel hasn’t launched anything new; it’s tiring to see perfumes linked to others, happening with the French Maison and all brands. We get tired of the lack of ideas, yet when they do launch something new, we still don’t like it, making us perpetually unsatisfied. Chanel has released something nice, smelling aldehydic, clean, and slightly sweet when dry, a woody sweetness. It doesn’t breathe fresh air for Chanel or the Allure line because it’s a known scent, nothing novel. It resembles the Cologne more than what they claim; that flanker smells like a cologne, while here we have an orange aroma with elevated aldehydes reminiscent of the original Sport. When it dries, it borrows a bit from the original Allure Homme, with a pleasant creamy wood that fulfils the function of smelling clean and accompanying, not opening a path. It moves away from being ideal for cold weather. Being limited deepens the anger of those expecting a perfume worthy of Chanel, orphans of a scent that is more longing than reality, yet it doesn’t prevent seeing the stars: it’s good, restrained in projection but outstanding in longevity, one of those signature perfumes, masculine and not falling into maturity. It deserves a chance if you don’t own any of that style, knowing the brand pays for itself and that Chanel isn’t what it used to be.

  • Bought it today. Smells very similar to Pour Homme, so if you like that, you’re 100% safe to buy blind. I’d say it’s a Bleu de Chanel without the incense base, fresher and more citrusy. Lasts quite a while, leaves a good trail, but don’t expect more. Smells very well, one of the best citrus scents. An 8.5 out of 10.

  • For those who said it smells like Pour Homme, well, yes, but in reverse. Allure Sport is from 2004, while Alberto Morillas released Versace in 2008.

  • carloslainezd

    On the first spray, it sounded like another scent I already own… I sprayed again… Oranges, woods, musk, I didn’t get it… Another spray… Got it, it’s Pour Homme. £130 is a rip-off.

  • Very green, like fruit skin, slightly bitter and Italian, masculine. But I don’t know why scents like this don’t work on my skin; when they have that slightly blue masculine DNA (and this isn’t even blue), they react poorly with my pH and smell strange. I’ve never felt the sweetness they claim. I always stick with the Blanche Edition.

  • Darternaxxx

    I do feel it’s different from Versace Pour Homme; this one feels sweeter, finer and more expensive, very delicious. The price is somewhat high, longevity is average and projection is the same. It’s worth it, even if you already own Versace.

  • Oscar Segovia

    How to destroy Chanel’s sport line in one step? It’s an NPC perfume with the vibe of Sauvage 🤮, made for mass appeal with zero originality. I’d stay with Eau Extreme a thousand times over.

  • Palanca2014

    I tried it and I love it. I see no resemblance to Allure Homme Sport. What a pity they don’t produce more; I would buy it again without hesitation.

  • Smells rich, nothing innovative, masculine, and everyone loves it. I own this and Pour Homme; while they follow the same line, here the citrus mix is more noticeable at the start, followed by a delicious woody base. Lasts about six hours, projects well, and the atomiser is perfect. Excellent quality.

  • It’s a delight. They say it’s similar to Versace Pour Homme, but the tangerine note in Superleggera makes the difference, making it more elegant and less brash than Versace’s lime.

  • If you’re looking for the same path as Pour Homme but more polished, they haven’t invented anything new, yet it remains a masculine and fresh delicacy. Without all the critics’ nonsense, no one cares if it’s inspired or a copy; what matters is that you like it. For me, it’s addictive, inviting your partner to wear it all day, with excellent longevity and projection.

  • Very delicious. It feels like the lighter, improved version of Allure Homme Sport Eau Extrême. The soft citrus opening, the transition to musk, the patchouli and amber, without losing that tangerine, make it unique: masculine, youthful, sweet, juicy, sexy and slightly dusty. It’s the same as Eau Extrême in the dry down, but lighter, less dusty and without the pepper or green notes. Very similar to Versace Pour Homme in concept, but with better quality and without that artificial citrus opening; plus, this one is sweeter. Pour Homme is merely salty and ultra-marine. Excellent flanker and a great Allure option.

  • Alberto Vargas

    It’s the grandchild of Allure. Clean, fine wood with citrus touches and that signature iris and musk blend from Olivier Polge’s nose. Although its longevity is moderate, it’s worth having in the collection.

  • I’ve never smelled anything like this. When sprayed, it smells like lemon, clean and fresh all afternoon. Pity it’s so expensive; the quality is there, but paying around 200 dollars (in Chile) seems beyond the ordinary budget. If you can afford it, don’t hesitate to buy it; you won’t regret it.

  • Ernesto Marin

    It smells like the man you’d want to have children with. If Bleu de Chanel smells like 🚩🚩🚩, this is the opposite: pure 🟩🟩🟩. They say it doesn’t last, but it stayed on me for 9 hours, so I see no issues. I got it gifted as a decant of Libre L’Absolu Platine 😀

  • It’s like mixing Versace Pour Homme with Lacoste Blanc, adding the Chanel touch, and charging triple. It’s not bad, but it adds nothing new.

  • Smells good, but it carries that 90s DNA that already feels familiar. It’s a timeless classic and a smart choice, though it brings nothing new; it will surely sell well. Honestly, given the price, I wouldn’t buy it; there are cheaper options with that same 90s scent.

  • XavicatPerfum

    Incredible, it smells absolutely delicious. Many dislike that it isn’t innovative, but it doesn’t matter; it smells fantastic. It’s one of the best citrus fragrances I’ve tried in years, and unlike Allure Extreme which fades quickly, this one lasts. The price is high, but for me, it’s worth it because it has everything I’m looking for.

  • Josué González Céspedes

    Bad perfume, simply more of the same. I’m surprised by the people who defend this perfume; they do it just to defend Chanel.

  • It’s a great perfume. A refined and daytime scent that everyone likes. Regarding longevity and projection, I thought it would be short; however, at a closed meeting at the fifth hour with heat, I only smelled it close to the skin. Until I leaned against a window and felt a strong, clear aroma reach me. Beware of olfactory fatigue: if it lasts and its trail is very good (for a citrus), when a gust of air reaches them they will notice. Its evolution isn’t its strong point; it’s not an olfactory journey. I used 14 sprays (4 on clothes).

  • Cristianp2316

    Marvellous. Although it doesn’t propose anything new, it’s a more refined and delicious aroma… Half the world likes it.

  • Jorge Pizarro

    In art, they always recycle: music, fashion, architecture… and obviously, perfumery. This fragrance is good, but it has a nineties vibe that can’t be removed. I insist, good craftsmanship but nothing new, boring, just to pass the time without glory, only to say you spent money on a CHANEL. The same goes for Sauvage Elixir; in my humble opinion, it’s a Drakkar Noire renewed and upscaled. Anyone who finds Superleggera and Sauvage Elixir exquisite, groundbreaking and iconic fragrances simply proves they’ve tried a couple of fragrances in their life.

  • I don’t know what to say… it’s a bombshell of a perfume! The first time I smelled it in a department store in Mexico, I got a dry spray and fell in love, but I’d never tried it on skin. Later I tried it in another department store and loved it, although I hadn’t bought it. My girlfriend gave it to me for Christmas and I really loved it. The first time I perceived a citrus aroma, a bit sweet and fresh, yet elegant; it smells like Chanel, delicious, pleasant and generates compliments. If you have the budget, it can be for daily use because it doesn’t bother and smells refined; ideal for the office, meetings, the beach, etc., but during the day. I don’t see it for night, and for Spring-Summer yes, perhaps Autumn, but not Winter because it won’t last long in that season. It projects well, very good longevity on skin and clothes, and a medium trail. Perhaps it’s one of my favourites. Definitely recommend buying it, especially because it’s a Limited Edition.

  • carloslainezd

    A curious fact: the term Superleggera refers to an exclusive Milanese tuning workshop that modifies sports cars like Ferrari, Alfa Romeo or Maserati. It’s an official collaboration between Chanel and this workshop. Here’s the link (you can see it’s the same workshop just by observing the logo on the bottle): https://www.touringsuperleggera.eu/en/

  • Nineties? Yes! And what a good thing, breaking the norm that everyone follows the same pattern. It’s nothing special, it doesn’t blow your mind… but it’s a lot of fun and rich. Not everything has to be challenging or groundbreaking; we also need easy, uncomplicated things for every moment and season, to always be perfect.

  • For me, a very good flanker of the Allure family. I’m surprised by the reviews I read… Did anyone expect Chanel to do something super innovative? Chanel is about elegance, savoir faire, playing it safe but well. It’s a continuationist perfume: refined citrus, clean woods, white musk and… although not listed, I note a high load of ambroxan. With this, Chanel has pulled off a modern version of Allure, more expansive, longer-lasting, and with a masculine twist. I’ve read they say it’s vintage or from the 90s, but one shouldn’t confuse ‘vintage’ with ‘masculine’. The first hours are very noticeable and it lasts more than eight hours. Enjoy it.

  • diegogr33

    A redundant launch because it recalls those fresh scents from the 90s and 2000s, with those green notes like Azzaro Chrome or Versace Pour Homme, but of better quality. It’s not as similar to the Sport in the opening; it has aromatic quality but doesn’t last, barely three hours before fading, while another perfume nearby was still there. I think Prada Luna Rossa Carbon or Dior Homme Sport are better, with the same metallic and crystal-like vibe. I disagree with those who adore it: it has a price above what it deserves (it should be $100). So far, the best is the Extreme for personality, followed by the normal Allure, which is more balanced. I even recommend the Allure Cologne for summer. It hasn’t impressed me because Chanel usually launches unique aromas that justify the price, but it’s a good perfume that beats 70% of designer scents. In short, mediocre for what we’re used to from Chanel, though it remains better than the average designer offering.

  • Reynaldo Linan

    My favourite Allure, a good citrus fragrance for hot weather. Good longevity (6-7 hours). You can feel the Chanel quality. It’s a pity it’s a limited edition. Without a doubt, I would buy a restock if I see it in a shop.

  • Toni Toba

    What a pity it’s a limited edition; they won’t be making it again. For me, it’s the best in the line: only the original Allure casts a shadow over it. Although I loved the Extreme, this Superleggera has taken its place. It’s a modernised version, more citrusy, energetic, and with better longevity. I’ve tried all of the house’s offerings and note variations, but they are all quality; the key is to buy what smells good to you. Don’t listen to those who criticise it for straying from the family DNA or resembling others; try it and you’ll see.

  • edwardjpb

    What a fantastic fragrance. Every time I use it, I receive compliments. As for longevity on my skin, it reaches approximately 7 hours. It’s a pity it’s a limited edition.

  • Good heavens, I found it in a shop and couldn’t resist (I know it can still be found on some websites, but this batch is quite good). Very, very 90s; since it’s a limited edition, it will be difficult to smell it again in the future, what a pity.

  • Arthur Grenouille

    Greetings, FANaromaticos. The SUPERLEGGERA, hated by many influencers, does not deserve that disdain. To start, I’ll say it does resemble its grandfather, ALLURE SPORT, but to claim it adds nothing new is to speak too much. What does it add? Precisely what the CHANEL ALLURE line (and Chanel men’s fragrances in general) lacks: longevity and sillage. And this must be emphasised: it lasts a long time and has a VERY, VERY strong sillage for a citrus/woody fragrance with blue fragrance vibes (aquatic?), and especially for a Chanel. Does it smell bad? No. Not at all. It’s exquisite. The opening is citrusy with extremely well-crafted and natural notes (charming but they last only about 10 minutes), then it becomes woody and very, very clean in the heart (cedar notes that remind me of sharpening a pencil, lasting intermittently for 5 or 6 hours), and finally, after 7 or 8 hours, something VERY strange and unusual happens that I’ve never experienced: at the dry-down, the fragrance becomes somewhat aquatic; the notes stop being consistent with the linearity one would expect and make that slight aquatic leap. Something one does not recall in the CHANEL ALLURE SPORT line. Here, something strange happens again; the fragrance kicks back in with power and maintains that strange dry-down for hours. The question one can ask is whether the dry-down notes are dissonant with the fragrance itself, and the answer is NO. The amalgamation with which this fragrance was conceived is a marvel. Superleggera is a whole olfactory experience; it’s sharp, has personality, is strident, and in every stage, it’s extremely pleasant. No one will tell you you smell bad, and in fact, you will receive compliments. The fragrance smells very good. Chanel says it’s a limited edition, and I’m not surprised; it’s the only fragrance they’re making that lasts more than 5 hours (I haven’t tried Bleu de Chanel L’Expenssive), so I have no doubt it’s worth it. Is it expensive? Yes, but in my opinion, an Arabic scent from Lattafa or Armaf won’t give you this quality of notes. I’ve had it for six months, and it’s been macerating, getting better with each passing day, as the woody notes sustain themselves more and more, becoming insane, and the aquatic part is blending with the woods and musk, making it much more sophisticated and enchanting. Many influencers say it adds nothing, but you must consider that most of them (if not all) are the same ones who, after thousands of fragrances in their collections, end up loving faecal OUD, skunk aromas, stable smells, and fruit vomit, and thus they are on another level that other mortals don’t understand. Greetings.

  • jerry drake

    It’s nice to travel, especially to meet other enthusiasts of this wonderful world in person. And at the airport, duty-free shops are like a magnet, irresistibly attracting you. To shorten the wait, imagining meeting my Fragantica friends, I stopped by the Dior and Chanel shelves. Or rather, Chanel is always in front of Dior. It reminds me of cars; BMW and Mercedes. Chanel is sportier and fresher, while Dior is more sophisticated and woody. The tester was in the corner, far back in the Allure Homme aisle. Arm raised, two sprays into the air to fill the bottle with a little fresh air, and off we go. It’s one of the two best Chanel fragrances today. It’s complete and has exactly what I was looking for. It has so much of the Chanel palette, yet it stands apart. The aroma catches you instantly and is a true flashback to the 90s: you feel like you’re in that era of the last century all the time and realise that elegance is more than just a word. Superleggera has everything a high-end designer fragrance needs. It works brilliantly for leisure and serious affairs, from the office to the pub. The fresh, citrus DNA of Chanel for refined men, but now considerably creamier and… perhaps more pasty? I applied it and smelled… first few minutes: Yes, Allure Homme with the Blanche citrus. But subtler, not as strident as its usual version, and also fresher and longer-lasting. Chanel has never surprised us with pure performance, but with a pleasant aroma and certain quality; here we find both, with a fragrance very similar to the bottle’s image: transparent, clean, elegant, and that is exactly what it is. In the heart of the fragrance, a slight creamy woodiness emerges that balances the cascade of fresh, pleasant musk. And here is something that made me smile from within. A small dig at Dior. Faithful to the motto: ‘This is how Sauvage should have smelled.’ Because when woods combine with musk and patchouli, the opening note clearly submerges, and the fragrance transforms into the base, gaining a slight sauvage vibe in this transition, but much lighter and natural, nothing forced or strident. Faithful to the motto: We could have done better. I bought the full bottle after just a couple of hours.

  • What a fantastic fragrance! Since I tried it, it’s been etched in my mind, and I had to wait a while before I could smell it again. The reunion was magical, and I confirmed I had to own it. What a wonderful aroma. What quality fragrance. Chanel and their exquisite ingredients. I’d read bad reviews, but I don’t understand why: a fresh citrus opening that doesn’t last long, then after about 10 minutes, it becomes delicious and lasts for hours. Of what I’ve tried, among the fresh ‘sport’ scents, it’s number one. Very versatile and usable in countless contexts. Day event, formal? It works. Hot weather? Yes. Refreshing? 100%. For sport: adequate. For the office? Epic. I can’t think of a context where it could go wrong.

  • Citrusy, elegant, and delicious. I believe it has the best citrus note I’ve ever smelled, with a musky and woody base. A real treat and a must-have if you love citrus fragrances. I own the AHS and they share many similarities, yet I still prefer Superleggera.

  • A regular perfume because it offers nothing that can’t be achieved with others in the family. It’s a strange mix between the EDT and the Extreme, as if made from the leftovers of these. Of course, the leftovers are Chanel scents… Somewhere between elegant and versatile, without being either. In my personal opinion, I’d choose the EDT a thousand times, and at most, the Sport straight up for something more informal. I insist, it’s not bad, but it’s not even an update to the line. As George Harrison would say in The Simpsons: ‘This has been done before.’

  • Rafael Reyes

    Chanel Superleggera. A very versatile citrus scent that works for practically any occasion. It opens fresh, bright, and clean, evolving over time into a beautifully crafted woody base that adds depth and elegance. The longevity, at least on my skin, is modest: around 4 to 6 hours, with a light to moderate sillage. It won’t fill a room, but it remains pleasant and well-balanced while present. The quality is evident throughout; everything is seamlessly integrated with nothing harsh or synthetic. For me, it’s a must in this line. It’s the first from the Homme Sport family I own, and curiously, it was also the one that caught my attention from the start. I recommend it, even considering the price. It’s one of those fragrances worth owning.