Men

Allure Homme Sport

Marca
Chanel
Jacques Polge
Perfumista
Jacques Polge
4.26 de 5
14,863 votos

Acordes principales

Descripción

Chanel Allure Homme Sport is a spicy woody fragrance for men. Launched in 2004, this composition was created by perfumer Jacques Polge. The top notes unfold with orange, marine notes, aldehydes, and red mandarin; the heart reveals pepper, neroli, and cedar; while the base notes complete the structure with vanilla, tonka bean, white musk, amber, vetiver, and elemi resin.

Resumen rápido

Cuándo llevarla (votos)

  • Invierno 7.8%
  • Primavera 35%
  • Verano 40%
  • Otoño 17%
  • Día 74%
  • Noche 26%

Notas clave

Comunidad

14,863 votos

  • Positivo 86%
  • Negativo 8.7%
  • Neutral 5.5%

Pirámide olfativa

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

Comunidad

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

Propiedad

¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?

Uso recomendado

Estación y momento del día con más votos.

Dónde comprar

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Envío rápido

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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.

  • It doesn’t smell bad, but I feel the opening smells like floor cleaner; as it evolves, the aroma changes and that comparison disappears. In short, it’s a daily wear perfume.

  • It’s been my signature fragrance for 8 years. Well, more like its equivalent, Saphir SP Man, for €13 I get 200ml of pure aromatic pleasure for the whole year! And it has longevity! Are you going to work moving weights? Ideal. To the office? Ideal. To go out? Ideal. To the gym? Ideal. It smells clean, but not a room-freshener clean; it smells like clean citrus fruit with a slight aldehyde that evolves into something softly sweet and woody. I live in Spain, in a region with very hot and long summers. Here it hardly ever gets cold, and many heavy fragrances find few occasions to be used. This is ideal for everyday use in all types of situations. You can’t imagine how many people have told me how good I smell or how much they love the trail. Even more, that a woman says several days later that her sheets still smell like you and she loves it… What more can you ask for at €13? Okay, I use the equivalent, but this perfume is perfect. If you want something more “formal,” its older brother Extreme is ideal.

  • Today I returned to an old love… I saw it in a photo and called it, repeatedly… I waited desperately and finally it came into my arms, fresh, cheerful, sensual, carnal, just like the first time. I undressed it and bathed with it; I loved it over and over again until I felt those humid but sunny aldehydes and that citrusy, salty skin like the sea, sometimes creamy and sweet and sometimes rough with pepper… Its enveloping scent brought me back to memories of its subtly vanilla and elemi-ambered hugs, and we’ll sleep in cozy resinous wooden beds, and every day will be a new lazy, unique sunrise with you by my side. I love you, Allure Sport.

  • Castle, watch out. You said it didn’t last long and you left it in the car. It needs temperature control and to be out of direct sunlight. Unless you live in Sweden, fragrances spoil in the car. If you carry it, put it inside a backpack.

  • Jaime Ramírez

    Fresh, citrusy aroma with a soft sweet touch. Honestly, I imagined something more spectacular because it’s Chanel, but it smells simple and people love it. I’m not regretting buying it, although I prefer other much cheaper ones like Perry Ellis 360 RED.

  • Totally addictive fragrance. Simple but 100% effective at grabbing my attention and letting me enjoy it. It’s not an overcomplicated composition: the citrus is very noticeable, quite acidic, like lemon instead of orange or tangerine, and a slightly sweet base from tonka bean and vanilla. It has nuances like aldehydes that give it weight and assemble everything masterfully. There’s also that marine undertone, not the protagonist but present. It’s not the most natural in the world, but the notes and composition are of high quality. The resemblance to Versace Pour Homme is evident, but here I don’t notice as much neroli as I do in VPH. I like this one more, and besides, it came out earlier. I think it deserves more recognition, just like the entire Allure line.

  • Mauro.A.81

    I love it; I clearly detect the citrus, woods, vanilla, and amber that sweeten without being cloying. It’s fresh, creamy, and clean. It’s a great, very versatile perfume; I’ve worn it at the office, at night, and on daytime walks. It’s the one that has generated the most compliments, interestingly the second is VPH. The longevity isn’t bad; it lasts about seven hours on me.

  • It’s impressive; it’s my favorite daily perfume. At first, I notice Allure’s charming citrus; as it dries down, a very subtle vanilla appears, making it slightly sweet at the end (nothing cloying), quite the opposite—it’s refreshing and sexy. Lasts 4-6 hours on my skin, which is a bit lacking for the price, but it’s totally worth buying again. Makes you feel fresh, and women love it.

  • It’s a super versatile fragrance, perfect for almost any occasion; if you use it, you won’t go wrong. It’s a clean, classy scent. Starts citrusy, then turns creamy and woody, finishing with a vanilla touch that isn’t cloying or nose-tiring. Lasts 6-7 hours on skin and up to a day on clothes, which is decent. It’s similar to Versace Pour Homme only at the start, but VPH is fresher while Allure Homme Sport is denser and fuller-bodied. I agree that AHS is talked about less now compared to its younger sibling Eau Extrême, but I prefer AHS over AHSEE; I feel Eau Extrême is just AHS aged to the sixth power. Some like AHSEE, but it doesn’t convince me.

  • It doesn’t last almost anything on skin, max 3 hours. The scent is excellent, but its longevity seems like that of an EDT. For the price, it’s not worth it: very poor longevity and projection.

  • Honestly, I expected a bit more; it smells good but lacks a touch to be exquisite. It smells very citrusy at first, then shifts to something woody and to a certain extent ‘metallic.’ It’s perfect for daily use because it’s simple and fits various settings. As for longevity and sillage, it’s poor; it has better sillage than longevity, I think the atomizer is too powerful. Finally, I believe there are better options for less money, as Allure isn’t spectacular in all aspects.

  • Exquisite fragrance, smells like quality, though not natural. It’s a clean, pleasant scent that doesn’t offend, somewhat fresh (without being the freshest or most citrusy; for extreme heat, I prefer others), creamy, musky, mentholated, and slightly vanilla. Much less citrusy than the VPH, although they share similarities, in my opinion only in the dry down of the VPH; almost nothing in the opening. For me, it would be an excellent signature and daily wear; it conveys care, neatness, and class. HOWEVER, given the price, I must be emphatic: it’s not worth it; its longevity is very sad these days; I recommend analyzing more affordable options for daily use. Finally, compared to the flanker Extreme, I prefer this one much more; I think the Extreme loses the peaceful tone this one has, but tastes vary. I wouldn’t buy it today, no matter how much I love its scent; it’s a painful disappointment.

  • Kevin Jodico

    Ladies and gentlemen of CHANEL: if you are going to create such an exquisite fragrance, you should be honorable and not destroy it with reformulations. It’s a rich aroma, even more so than the Eau Extreme in my opinion, but it lacks projection and longevity. I don’t know what the drive is to reduce good fragrances to the minimum just to highlight others. It lasts, at best, 3 to 4 hours. A mockery for the price it has. Scent: 10/10, Projection: 6/10, Longevity: 3/10.

  • Allure Homme Sport is a fragrance that, in my experience, almost everyone likes; I’ve never heard a negative opinion about its scent. It opens with orange and marine citrus notes; in the dry down, it feels sweet and warm. It doesn’t feel dense, but rather volatile; the marine notes aren’t deep, giving it a more aquatic than oceanic appearance. As it evolves, the initial citrus-marine opening fades slightly and aldehydes emerge, providing cleanliness, like freshly ironed clothes. Vanilla and tonka bean add that sweet, creamy part without being cloying, just making the perfume more versatile and unique. It lasts 5-6 hours with moderate projection for the first two hours. I consider it one of Chanel’s best perfumes and one of the best citrus-marine fragrances thanks to the quality of its ingredients.

  • It’s the one I use when I don’t want to think about which perfume to wear. It never fails. I’ve bought it four times; that says it all.

  • Antonio Taleno

    I’ve tried both the Eau Extreme and the regular Home Sport, and I have to say the regular one is the best; it’s definitely a scent that people love and receive many compliments on, as Andrés would say: ‘spectacular.’ No wonder it’s one of the bestsellers.

  • This fragrance reminds me of Versace Eau Fraiche; they almost share the same scent, although as it dries, the Versace smells very much like Montblanc Starwalker. I’d dare say they are truly great for these summer days and intense heat. I recommend them.

  • Fresh, citrusy, and striking—a perfect blend for its name ‘Sport.’ Opens with clean citrus, sweet mandarin, and aquatic notes giving it a salty touch; very masculine and classic without feeling old. As it dries, the mandarin persists, loses some acidity, and blends with vanilla and tonka bean in the base. It opens very fresh and becomes warm upon drying, but without reaching the heat of its sibling Eau Extreme; CAHS maintains the ideal citrus freshness for high temperatures, which is why I prefer it. Scent: 8/10, very pleasant in the heat, a must-try on the wrist. Longevity: 8/10, lasts 6 hours on skin and sticks to clothes for days or weeks. Sillage: 6/10, projects about a meter for the first 2-3 hours (personal bubble) then settles close to the skin. Versatility: 8/10, though it’s for the gym, it looks perfect for shopping or meetings. Age: 20+, slightly more mature than the Extreme. They are very similar, identical opening, and start to differ after 20 minutes.

  • Monty Phyton

    Smells like the classic Chinese Hercules that my grandma used to give me for school, now known as Spagnolo Sport Red. Allure Sport lasts 4 hours: starts fresh with aquatic, slightly marine, and citrus notes, then woods, pepper, and an ambered musk linger subtly and harmoniously on the skin without abrupt transitions. Vanilla closes it out as a supportive base. I don’t detect any aldehydes. It has a childish, candid touch—nothing mature, goes unnoticed, and doesn’t draw attention; although I think it has poor sillage and doesn’t earn compliments, it transports me to innocence. Great for reading. 🕯️ 5.5/10.🔥

  • XavicatPerfum

    A delight, smells like slightly powdery orange, feels almost natural, gives off a vibe of cleanliness and energy; people who smell it will love it. Still, it’s not a perfume that lasts long; it barely lasts on me. Okay, smelling it is delicious, but I’m not sure if it’s worth paying so much for such mediocre performance; I’m not sure if I’d buy it again.

  • Elk gultier

    The simplest perfume in history and one of the most versatile; it’s almost an insult to say I’ve used this beast; I’m on my third bottle. It smells super sharp of citrus and clean, nothing sweet or pleasant or anything, it SMELLS LIKE SOAP and bergamot, I love it, I use it liberally for the gym and just smelling it puts me in the zone.

  • Come on… a fragrance that fulfills its function perfectly. Critical opening is slightly sweet and green, dry down is sweet and powdery. With an average longevity of about 5 hours at most, with medium projection, and it’s more than enough since it doesn’t seek to grab attention. Day use rather than night. A simple perfume, nothing complicated, and that’s where its greatness lies; it’s a jewel. It’s one of the fragrances that has brought me the most comments, to the point that people linger near you to keep smelling it. Recommended blindly.

  • The opening and first phase carry the DNA of the EDT (which is truly a marvel) without the peach, but with very well-executed orange and mandarin, perhaps as in few fragrances. That phase lasts about 20 to 30 minutes projecting weakly but insistently. Then the projection fades even more, and the dry down is pure tonka with a hint of sweet orange deep in the base. Like Eau Extreme, though less powdery. It’s a rich, harmless scent with perceived quality and enjoyable instantly, but lightyears away from the EDT. Plus, it lasts and projects very little, maybe 2-3 hours with luck, projecting 45 minutes (and it costs a fortune… $200 for 100ml in Argentina). Is Versace Pour Homme the same? Not even close. The proposal is similar, though Versace leans much more into floral and generic vibes; even with lower perceived quality, its scent is there, though it costs half or less. On my skin, it lasts and projects even less than Chanel. I wouldn’t recommend Versace at all just based on price if you like the Allure Sport aroma. But I do suggest trying the Allure EDT. Edit after using it again during a week of heat: this doesn’t last or project anything. Batch 2023.

  • Honestly, a great perfume. It could be the scent of someone indifferent to fragrances who just wants one, and it would be valid because there’s no occasion where you’ll be told you smell bad with this. However, personally, I prefer Versace Pour Homme.

  • soysamlopez

    I just bought it and feel it’s too early to give a full review, but it does have a citrus and marine opening with orange and mandarin notes. The woody, slightly sweet aroma doesn’t take long to appear and smells very rich. Masculine, sophisticated, and versatile are some of the adjectives that come to mind when describing this perfume at first glance.

  • soysamlopez

    I’d describe it in two aromas: orange and vanilla. It smells incredibly delicious. For some reason, women love the sweet notes, and the citrus gives it a masculine vibe. I’ve gotten a few compliments on the street, which is a big deal because where I live, nobody pays attention to anyone. Recommended for a fresh morning rather than extreme heat conditions.

  • It’s a rich scent, but unfortunately, when I lived in a hot city, it didn’t help me at all. I got a compliment or two at the office, but you really need to test it first to see how it performs on your skin. The longevity is poor; I wouldn’t recommend buying it.

  • JavierSantana

    WOW! I bought it a few days ago and it has the same hype as Eau Extreme; both are top-tier. Chanel never fails on quality and composition—it’s pure luxury. Soft citrus notes like orange, aldehydes, and marine accords give it a modern touch that hits the nose, followed by spicy pepper in the mid-notes and a creamy, vanilla, musky base typical of the house. I don’t detect any woodiness, and I’m grateful for that; the blend is perfect as is. Lasting power is good once dry. It doesn’t work in the heat, but in autumn, fresh spring, or winter, it shines. Ideal for collection and a good Swiss Army knife to store alongside some Creed or summer Cool Water. If you ask me, this is a thousand times better than Bleu, the trimmed versions of Egoiste and Antaeus, and forget Pour Monsieur.

  • I bought it again a few days ago; I used to wear it at university when I first started exploring perfumes. I remember that in 2013, Chanel marketed it as ‘the scent of bare skin.’ The batch from that era must have been before the Extreme version launched. Bought in 2013, the batch was likely from earlier years. What a surprise: it’s been completely reformulated. The essence is still there, but I’m sure they reformulated it after Extreme came out due to ‘hierarchy.’ The version I remember was quite durable (5-6 hours, noticeable all the time without being overpowering), much sweeter than the Extreme, more tonka and vanilla-forward. The current version is odd: very citrusy at first, then fades significantly after 15 minutes, leaving behind a spicy, musky, slightly woody skin trail. The tonka and vanilla are just imagined. I understand the change due to hierarchy, especially since it ended up similar to Extreme otherwise. What I don’t get is why you now need at least 10 sprays to create a very small sillage. With the 2013 formula, 4 or 5 sprays were enough to have a noticeable sillage lasting hours without needing decanters. I get why people now say it smells ‘like deodorant’ or ‘for the gym.’ For 3,000 MXN, there are better options for a scent that lasts 30 minutes.

  • I was torn between Allure, YSL V, and YSL EDP, so I went with the first one. I knew I had doubts, especially about longevity. I admit I’m drawn to citrus scents with sweet notes. I didn’t hesitate to buy it and I have no regrets. Its longevity and projection are moderate, but it lasts just as long as other perfumes that promise 8 hours. It delivers what I was looking for, and the feeling of wearing it is truly a gift.

  • Very versatile fragrance, clean scent with a subtle vanilla touch. Works in any season or occasion; it’s pleasant, refined, and elegant. Lasting power and sillage are moderate.

  • metroidsoldier

    I tried this Chanel Allure Sport and it smells like candied orange, blending citrus and aromatic notes with aldehydes, black pepper, and marine accords. It’s sporty, fresh, and sweet, with that typical Nivea Men Sport Fresh aroma.

  • Allure Homme Sport is solid—it doesn’t dazzle or polarize. It understands that being ‘correct’ can be a compliment and executes it with mastery. I’ve tested it many times hoping for an unexpected spark to make it unforgettable, but there isn’t one. It’s an 8/10: extremely well-behaved, unable to reach 10 due to a lack of soul and a fear of being too loud. It blends sweet citrus with a marine touch; the opening is its most youthful moment. On my skin, the aldehydes are barely noticeable, but they give that clean, luminous summer vibe. It’s heat, it’s light—the go-to cologne when you don’t know what to wear. It smells good, nobody complains, nobody is impressed. It’s like wearing a perfectly ironed polo shirt at a crowded terrace where everyone else is wearing the same thing. Its greatest strength is versatility, though limited to warm weather. It works at any age and in almost any occasion, except very formal ones. Perfect for a beer with friends, a walk in the sun, or the office in August. For a date? No, because nobody falls in love with what’s correct. You don’t need it every day, but there are days when you need exactly what Allure gives you.

  • I really like it, but it doesn’t last long and the sillage is minimal. Best suited for sunny days.

  • A lovely classic citrus scent with a marine touch and vanilla base. I absolutely love it, but keep in mind: since it’s citrusy, it doesn’t last or project much. It smells super clean and leaves a very pleasant personal trail.

  • Bought it because my dad said it was ‘Messi’s perfume,’ so I went in blind expecting it to be bad. What a mistake! At first, I thought it was a great scent—solid but not as standout as I’d hoped. I only got compliments from people who know their perfumes or those who stood very close. The notes are typical, but if I compare it to soccer, it’s like a 5 midfielder: it works and delivers, but it doesn’t explode. 8/10, a perfect score for what it is.