GushElizabeth ArdenRed Door
Elizabeth Arden Red Door
Elizabeth Arden

Red Door

Floral
Rose
White Floral
Fruity
Woody
Powdery
Amber
EDT · 1989 · womens

Elizabeth Arden's Red Door arrived in 1989 as a signature scent for the brand, named after the iconic red doors of Arden's spas and salons. It became a cornerstone fragrance in the house's lineup, offering a more accessible entry point to the Arden aesthetic compared to the brand's other classic compositions.

Red Door opens with bright, slightly spiced top notes of anise, peach, and plum alongside rose and orange blossom, creating an immediate fruity-floral impression. The heart is densely layered with classic white florals, tuberose, and lily of the valley taking the lead, supported by jasmine, freesia, honey, and carnation for depth and roundness. The base settles into a warm, powdery amber and benzoin foundation with sandalwood and musk providing skin-like support, giving the fragrance a soft, sensual finish that lasts.

This is a straightforward floral oriental that doesn't attempt subtlety. It works best for someone who enjoys traditional, feminine florals with generous sillage and wants something that reads as distinctly perfume rather than a skin scent. Red Door suits daytime and evening wear equally well, though its richness makes it particularly effective in cooler months or as a statement fragrance for special occasions. If you gravitate toward The Romantic, The Hedonist, and The Homesteader, this one deserves consideration.

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Price Comparison5 retailers · updated daily
SizeUpdated 569m ago
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Fragrance Notesbrand verified
Top · 0–30 min
Anise
Anise
Sweet, warm, and intensely licorice-like, anise seed has a Mediterranean, medicinal sweetness that is simultaneously familiar and distinctive. In perfumery anise adds a warm, aromatic depth that bridges spice and gourmand families. Used in oriental compositions and masculine fragrances to add a slightly unusual, warming sweetness.
Orange Blossom
Orange Blossom
Sweeter and more honeyed than neroli (both come from the same tree), orange blossom is a floral note with a warm, almost edible quality. It floats between citrus and floral families, adding richness without weight. A signature note of classic Mediterranean and Middle Eastern perfumery.
Peach
Peach
Ripe, juicy, and velvety, peach has a warm, slightly creamy sweetness that feels lush rather than childish in the right context. It adds a fruity sensuality to floral and oriental fragrances, and its slightly fuzzy quality can even play into tactile, skin-like accords. A note that feels like high summer.
Plum
Plum
Dark, slightly tart, and warm, plum has a wine-like depth that makes it more serious than cherry or peach. It adds a fruity darkness to oriental fragrances, with a slightly fermented quality that bridges fruit and leather families. Used to add drama and depth to floral-oriental compositions.
Rose
Rose
The queen of floral notes and the most-used ingredient in fine perfumery. Real rose is simultaneously velvety, honeyed, and slightly spicy, nothing like the synthetic candy version. Depending on the variety used, it can anchor a composition or drift through it like a ghost, adding warmth without dominating.
Violet
Violet
Sweet, powdery, and faintly green, violet sits between floral and earthy in a way that feels distinctly old-world glamorous. The leaf and the flower smell quite different: the flower is sugary and delicate, while violet leaf is fresh and slightly vegetal. Together they create a note that feels both nostalgic and current.
Heart · 30 min – 3 hrs
Carnation
Carnation
Spicy, clove-like, and slightly powdery, carnation is one of perfumery's oldest floral notes, with a warm, almost peppery character that distinguishes it from softer flowers. It has a vintage, slightly old-fashioned quality that is coming back into fashion. Think pressed flowers in an old book, warm and complex.
Freesia
Freesia
Bright, clean, and slightly peppery, freesia is a springtime flower with a fresh, almost citrusy edge that prevents it from reading as purely sweet. It's one of the more versatile florals, sitting comfortably in both delicate feminine compositions and fresh unisex fragrances. Approachable and elegant simultaneously.
Honey
Honey
Sweet, waxy, and faintly animalic, honey in perfumery has an almost skin-like quality, intimate and slightly raw. It's related to beeswax in the natural world, and both add a warmth that reads as close and personal. Honey bridges floral and oriental families, adding natural sweetness with a slightly dark edge.
Jasmine
Jasmine
Intoxicating, heady, and slightly animalic, jasmine is one of the few flowers that smells as rich in a bottle as it does climbing a garden wall at dusk. It has an almost fleshy, indolic quality that stops it reading as purely 'clean.' Jasmine is a workhorse in both feminine and masculine perfumery, adding depth and soul.
Lily
Lily
Grand, creamy, and slightly spicy, Oriental lily (Stargazer, Casablanca) is one of the most powerful natural flowers, with a heady, complex sweetness that fills a room. White lily is softer and more transparent. Both add drama and elegance to floral compositions, though they require careful handling to avoid becoming oppressive.
Lily Of The Valley
Lily Of The Valley
Crisp, green, and dewy, this spring flower smells like rain on cool grass with a clean, soap-like clarity. It's one of perfumery's most requested scents despite being nearly impossible to extract naturally, so it's almost always recreated synthetically. The result is fresh, tender, and timelessly elegant.
Orchid
Orchid
Exotic, slightly sweet, and airy, 'orchid' in perfumery is usually a constructed accord rather than a direct extract, designed to evoke the flower's mysterious tropical beauty. Depending on the perfumer, it can read as vanilla-like and warm or cool and green. A note that suggests luxury and rarity.
Rose
Rose
The queen of floral notes and the most-used ingredient in fine perfumery. Real rose is simultaneously velvety, honeyed, and slightly spicy, nothing like the synthetic candy version. Depending on the variety used, it can anchor a composition or drift through it like a ghost, adding warmth without dominating.
Tuberose
Tuberose
One of the most intensely floral natural ingredients in existence, rich, creamy, and almost narcotic in its sweetness. Tuberose is polarizing by design: it's meant to be enveloping, not background. It has rubbery, vanilla-like facets that make it feel both sensual and slightly retro.
Ylang-Ylang
Ylang-Ylang
Base · 3–12 hrs
Amber
Amber
A warm, resinous accord rather than a single ingredient, amber is typically built from labdanum, benzoin, and vanilla to create a rich, honeyed, almost solar warmth. It's the quintessential base-note family, adding a comforting richness that makes fragrances feel complete. The difference between a fragrance feeling cold and feeling alive.
Benzoin
Benzoin
Sweet, warm, and balsamic, benzoin resin smells like vanilla mixed with incense, with a powdery, slightly medicinal edge. It adds a comforting warmth and fixative quality to oriental fragrances, and blends beautifully with spices. Often used to smooth and round off sharp edges in complex base notes.
Cedar
Cedar
Heliotrope
Heliotrope
Powdery, sweet, and slightly almond-like, heliotrope is the quintessential 'retro' note of Victorian-era perfumery, now experiencing a fashionable revival. It smells of sugar, vanilla, and just enough floral to keep it interesting. In modern fragrances it tends to read as nostalgic, soft, and unapologetically pretty.
Musk
Musk
The base layer of almost every modern fragrance, a soft, warm, skin-like scent that extends longevity and bridges other notes together. Natural musk was once derived from deer (now banned); today's musks are synthetic and range from clean and soapy to dark and animalic. The right musk makes a fragrance smell like 'you.'
Sandalwood
Sandalwood
Creamy, smooth, and milky with a soft, skin-like warmth that clings beautifully. True Mysore sandalwood is one of perfumery's most precious ingredients, simultaneously wood and skin, never cold or sharp. It rounds off sharp edges in any composition and makes the wearer smell subtly, irresistibly warmer.
Vetiver
Vetiver
Earthy, smoky, and complex, vetiver root is extracted from a grass native to India and has a scent that is simultaneously rooty, woody, and slightly lemony. It's one of perfumery's great base notes: tenacious, unisex, and endlessly adaptable. A fragrance built around vetiver feels grounded and deeply confident.
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Fragrance Family
Floral Oriental
EDT

Elizabeth Arden Red Door— Prices, Coupons & Buying Guide

Best price today: Red Door is $12.95. Without a coupon the lowest price is $12.95. Gush tracks 47+ retailers updated every 2 hours.

Are grey market retailers authentic?

Yes. Jomashop, FragranceNet, and MaxAroma sell 100% authentic Elizabeth Arden fragrances through unofficial distribution channels. The fragrance is identical to department store stock. Grey market refers to the supply chain, not product quality. The price difference comes entirely from the distribution channel.

Frequently asked questions

Cheapest price for Elizabeth Arden Red Door? +
$12.95 at FragranceShop. Gush compares 47+ retailers updated every 2 hours.
Is $12.95 a good price for Red Door? +
Yes. The current best price is $12.95 and MSRP is $19.99. At $12.95 you save 35% vs retail.
What does Elizabeth Arden Red Door smell like? +
Elizabeth Arden's Red Door arrived in 1989 as a signature scent for the brand, named after the iconic red doors of Arden's spas and salons. It became a cornerstone fragrance in the house's lineup, offering a more accessible entry point to the Arden aesthetic compared to the brand's other classic compositions. Red Door opens with bright, slightly spiced top notes of anise, peach, and plum alongside rose and orange blossom, creating an immediate fruity-floral impression. The heart is densely layered with classic white florals, tuberose, and lily of the valley taking the lead, supported by jasmine, freesia, honey, and carnation for depth and roundness. The base settles into a warm, powdery amber and benzoin foundation with sandalwood and musk providing skin-like support, giving the fragrance a soft, sensual finish that lasts. This is a straightforward floral oriental that doesn't attempt subtlety. It works best for someone who enjoys traditional, feminine florals with generous sillage and wants something that reads as distinctly perfume rather than a skin scent. Red Door suits daytime and evening wear equally well, though its richness makes it particularly effective in cooler months or as a statement fragrance for special occasions. If you gravitate toward The Romantic, The Hedonist, and The Homesteader, this one deserves consideration.
What are the notes in Elizabeth Arden Red Door? +
Top: Anise, Orange Blossom, Peach, Plum, Rose, Violet. Heart: Carnation, Freesia, Honey, Jasmine, Lily, Lily Of The Valley, Orchid, Rose, Tuberose, Ylang-Ylang. Base: Amber, Benzoin, Cedar, Heliotrope, Musk, Sandalwood, Vetiver.
What fragrance family is Red Door? +
Elizabeth Arden Red Door belongs to the Floral Oriental fragrance family. It is an EDT.
What is a grey market fragrance retailer? +
Grey market retailers sell authentic fragrances sourced through unofficial distribution -- typically excess inventory from authorized distributors. The product is real and identical to retail. FragranceNet (est. 1997), Jomashop, and MaxAroma are well-established with millions of verified reviews.

Gush earns a commission on purchases at no cost to you · Prices update every 2 hours · Coupon success rates based on affiliate feed data · Grey market = authentic, unofficial supply chain