Pierre-Cardin

Monte Carlo

for women

Monte Carlo smells fresh and airy with citrus and fruity accents, for men who want a clean signature, and feels easy to wear year-round from day to evening.

Jump to notes, performance, or quick answers.

Monte Carlo

Fragrance notes

How this scent is often described (from community votes on accords—useful when a full pyramid isn’t in our data yet).

Citrus 100%
Fruity 97%
Green 89%
White Floral 75%
Sweet 72%
Fresh Spicy 69%
Fresh 62%
Amber 59%
Aromatic 58%
Vanilla 57%

Performance

Empty fields use this listing’s top accords (Citrus, Fruity, and Green) plus the overview text—add your own numbers anytime after testing on skin.

Longevity

With Citrus, Fruity, Green, and White Floral among the strongest accord tags here, brighter, lighter families in this mix often fade sooner; reapply or keep a travel size if you want all-day presence.

Projection

With Citrus, Fruity, Green, and White Floral among the strongest accord tags here, lighter profiles usually hug the skin; you can layer sprays to push without filling a whole room.

Overview

Monte Carlo by Pierre Cardin is a Amber Floral fragrance for women.Monte Carlowas launched in 2000. Top notes are Tea, Orange, Bergamot and Mint; middle notes are Blueberry, Jasmine, Neroli and Rose; base notes are Peach, Amber, Vanille and Patchouli.Pierre Cardin launches Monte Carlo perfume at the start of the new millennium. The fragrance is an oriental floral - fruity, and it opens with notes of bergamot, orange and mint tea. The heart of blueberry, jasmine, rose and neroli is settled on the base of patchouli, amber, vanilla and peach.Available as EDP

Quick answers

Short takes based on this page’s notes and accords—your taste still wins.

Is Monte Carlo office-safe?
Fresher, lighter profiles often feel easy in conservative offices at one spray.
Best season
Mixed profile—often bright up top with a warmer base—works year-round depending on sprays and temperature.
Where to try it
Department-store counters, brand boutiques, and trusted sample or decant sellers online—always test on your own skin before a full bottle.

Buying advice in plain language

If you are deciding on Monte Carlo, start with wear context instead of hype. Ask where you will use it most: office, casual daytime, or evening social settings. That single choice filters almost every buying decision because freshness, sweetness, and projection read very differently depending on environment.

Then use this page in three steps. First, scan the notes and accord profile to understand the scent direction. Second, check longevity and projection hints to estimate how it may behave on your skin. Third, open one or two comparisons to see trade-offs against similar perfumes. This avoids buying a fragrance that is good in isolation but wrong for your routine.

A practical shortlist is one signature scent plus one contrast option from the same brand family. That gives flexibility without over-collecting. If Monte Carlo fits your use case, sample first and compare it with one related option below before committing to a full bottle.