Lattafa in Canada — The Honest Guide

Lattafa comes up in almost every "best budget fragrance" conversation online, and for once the hype mostly holds up. The Sharjah-based house makes fragrances that punch well past their price, and we hand-decant a curated shelf of them from 2ml so you can try before committing to a full bottle. Here is what is actually true about the brand, what we stock, and which well-known scents each bottle sits near — checked against our own fragrance notes records, not marketing copy.

Who is Lattafa?

Lattafa Perfumes is a fragrance house based in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates, part of the wider Gulf perfume industry that supplies the region's souks and, increasingly, the rest of the world. The brand built its reputation on big-projection, long-wearing eau de parfums sold at a fraction of what the fragrances they get compared to cost — a formula that turned releases like Khamrah and Yara into genuine word-of-mouth hits rather than niche curiosities. Lattafa does not hide the comparison game. Several of its bottles are openly built in the same territory as well-known designer and niche releases, using different (and usually cheaper) raw materials to land in a similar neighbourhood, not an identical one.

Why the value is real

A full 100ml bottle of Lattafa typically runs $30 to $60 CAD before shipping and duty from overseas sellers, and duty on perfume crossing into Canada is real money. Decanting sidesteps both problems: you buy exactly the amount you want to test, already landed here in Regina, with no customs wait and no duty surprise at the door. It also means you are not stuck with 100ml of something that turns out to need a few weeks of maceration to open up, or just is not your thing.

Our stocked Lattafa scents

Nine bottles from the Lattafa shelf, each checked against our fragrance database rather than repeated from a listing somewhere else.

Scent Profile What it actually is
Khamrah Ember The one most people mean when they say "Lattafa." Cinnamon, cardamom and saffron over dates and praline, settling into amber, tonka, musk and vanilla — a boozy, mulled-wine gourmand often set next to Kilian's Angels' Share.
Khamrah Qahwa Ember Khamrah's coffee-and-cinnamon sibling: dark roasted praline over warm spice and cream, in the same territory as Kilian Black Phantom.
Eclaire Ember Caramel, milk and sugar opening into honeyed white flowers and a vanilla-praline-musk base — our budget read on Giardini di Toscana's Bianco Latte.
Asad Ember A warm, spicy amberwood built in the same boozy-spice territory as Dior Sauvage Elixir, under its own name and its own price.
Al Nashama Caprice Ember A fresh, spicy-aromatic fougère — cardamom and ginger over lavender and mint, settling into woody amber. Its own composition; our records show no specific dupe target.
Qaed Al Fursan Ember Sweet pineapple and saffron warming into balsamic, amber-oud woods. An oriental woody built as its own thing rather than a named dupe.
Bade'e Al Oud — Oud for Glory Timber Smoky saffron and oud over incense and ambergris, echoing Initio's Oud for Greatness at a fraction of the price.
Alhambra Opulence Leather Timber Cardamom opens into supple leather and jasmine sambac, closing on amber, patchouli and moss — widely compared to Tom Ford Ombre Leather.
Alhambra Eternal Touch Ember Tobacco leaf and spice over a vanilla-cocoa-tonka heart — the same warm gourmand-tobacco lane as Tom Ford Tobacco Vanille.

A note on the two Alhambra bottles

Opulence Leather and Eternal Touch come from Maison Alhambra, which is a Lattafa sub-brand — Lattafa Perfumes Industries launched Maison Alhambra in 2022, alongside other in-house lines like Lattafa Pride and Asdaaf. So grouping them under Lattafa is fair: they are part of the same family.

How to choose by profile

Every scent we carry is tagged by profile, not vibe: Mist (fresh, light), Ember (warm, spicy, gourmand), Timber (woody, resinous) or Bloom (floral). Our Lattafa shelf leans hard into warmth — seven of the nine are Ember, two are Timber, and we do not currently stock a Mist or Bloom entry from the brand. If you already know you like a cinnamon-and-vanilla gourmand, start with Khamrah or Khamrah Qahwa. If you want leather and oud with less sugar, Opulence Leather and Oud for Glory sit in Timber. Not sure which lane you're in? The scent quiz asks a few plain questions and points you at a profile before you spend a cent.

Frequently asked questions

Is Lattafa available in Canada?

Yes. Full bottles are sold through a handful of online importers, and we carry decants of nine Lattafa and Lattafa-shelf scents in 2, 5, 7.5 and 10ml sizes, decanted here in Regina — no customs wait, no duty surprise.

What is the best Lattafa fragrance?

There is no single answer, but Khamrah is the brand's most talked-about release and the one most people mean by "the best Lattafa" — a spiced, boozy date gourmand. Asad and Qaed Al Fursan are the strongest picks if you want something less sweet.

Is Lattafa Khamrah available in Canada, and can I try it before buying a full bottle?

Yes — we stock Khamrah decants from 2ml, so you can test it for the price of a coffee before deciding on a bigger size.

Are Lattafa fragrances exact copies of designer perfumes?

No. Several are openly built in the same territory as well-known releases, sharing a mood or a key accord, but they use different raw materials and are not identical formulations. We say "inspired by" or "in the territory of," never "identical" — that is the accurate description.

How long does Lattafa last on skin?

It varies by scent. The amber-gourmand entries (Khamrah, Khamrah Qahwa, Eclaire) tend to run long and warm, while the fresher aromatic piece, Al Nashama Caprice, sits closer to skin and fades sooner. These notes come from our own records, not marketing claims.

Not sure where to start? Take the scent quiz — a couple of minutes, four profiles, no guessing — and we'll point you at the Lattafa decant, or something else entirely, that actually matches what you like.

Atelier Elemental is an independent decanting service. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners; brand names are used only to identify the genuine products we decant or honestly compare.