Buy an androstadienone cologne and you are buying the pheromone compound with the most published science behind it and the most hype layered on top. The research is real. The marketing built on the research usually is not.
This guide separates the two. What androstadienone actually does in the lab, what that does and does not predict about an androstadienone cologne on your skin, and which products in the catalog name it on the label so you can check what you are buying.
What is androstadienone?
Androstadienone is a steroid derivative present in male sweat, semen, and skin, and the most heavily researched of the putative human pheromones. In the community you will see it written as A1, AND, or 4,16-androstadien-3-one. The nickname is the "love molecule," and the name points at what people expect from it.
It is not a sexual or dominance compound. That role goes to androstenone. Androstadienone is the emotional layer: the molecule people reach for when the goal is warmth, comfort, and a sense of connection rather than a loud signal. In women's products it plays a similar role aimed at men. For the full compound-by-compound picture, the pheromones that attract women guide breaks down how each one is used.
What does androstadienone actually do?
It produces small, measurable physiological and mood effects in women under controlled conditions. That is the defensible claim, and it is better supported than almost anything else in this category.
The most cited study is Wyart et al. 2007 in the Journal of Neuroscience. Forty-eight women took 20 sniffs of pure androstadienone, and over the next two hours showed higher salivary cortisol along with improved mood and sexual arousal, as Scientific American summarized at the time. Brain-imaging work points the same way: Savic and colleagues found androstadienone activates the hypothalamus in women, while in men it lights up only ordinary smell regions. That sex difference is rare in olfactory research and is part of why the compound got taken seriously.
Earlier work by Bensafi and colleagues reported mood and arousal shifts even at concentrations below conscious detection. So something is happening. The honest caveat is how context-dependent it is: a later fMRI study found the response to androstadienone under stress was modulated by menstrual cycle phase and trait anxiety. The molecule does not do one fixed thing to everyone.
Does androstadienone cologne actually attract anyone?
This is where the evidence gets thin, and where most marketing quietly changes the subject. A mood or cortisol shift in a lab is a long way from "this cologne will make someone want you."
The strongest challenge is Hare et al. 2017 in Royal Society Open Science. In a double-blind design, androstadienone had no effect on how attractive faces were rated, on gender perception, or on judgments of unfaithfulness. Reviews of the field are blunter still: biologist Tristram Wyatt argues, returning to first principles, that no human pheromone has been identified to the standard used for other species, and Science magazine has asked outright whether human pheromones exist at all.
Against that, the dedicated community reports something they call the "fallout effect": a lingering sense of attachment or warmth that surfaces after repeated exposure, not during a single meeting. That is field-report evidence, not controlled data, and it should be weighed as such. The useful read is that the mood effects are real enough to study, but the leap from "elevated mood" to "attraction" is exactly the part that keeps failing to replicate.
The emotional-amplifier caveat
Androstadienone amplifies an emotional context. It does not create one. Understand that before you wear it, because it is the part marketing leaves out.
The community framing, backed by the context-dependence in the research, is that A1 deepens whatever is already in the room. If an interaction has warmth, it can add to it. If the vibe is awkward, needy, or flat, it can deepen that too. That makes it a poor fit for cold approaches and high-stakes first impressions, and a better fit for situations where rapport already exists: a second or third date, an established relationship, a relaxed social setting rather than a tense one.
It is also a poor fit for professional contexts, where the goal is rarely emotional intimacy. If you want a compound that reads as confident and approachable in a wider range of rooms, androstenol is the safer starting point. A1 is a specialist.
Which colognes actually disclose androstadienone?
The ones worth your money name it on the label, and the best of them tell you the dose. Roughly 59 products in the catalog list androstadienone among their compounds, but disclosure quality varies enormously between them.
At the credible end, here is how some named-compound products score on the Phero Score rubric:
| Product | Brand | Discloses | Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| Voodoo for Men | Liquid Alchemy Labs | Androstenone, androstenol, androstadienone, copulins | 8.8/10 |
| Nude Original for Men | Liquid Alchemy Labs | Androstenone, androstenol, androstadienone | 8.5/10 |
| Grail of Affection | Pheromone Treasures | Androsterone, androstadienone | 7.4/10 |
| New Pheromone Additive for Men | Love Scent | Androstenone, androstenol, androstadienone | 7.2/10 |
Voodoo for Men sits at the top of the entire catalog at 8.8/10, and it gets there partly by naming every active in the blend. New Pheromone Additive is the disclosure gold standard for a different reason: its label states "3 mg total pheromone content per 10 ml bottle: 1 mg androstenone, 1 mg androstenol, 1 mg androstadienone." Exact molecules, exact milligrams. That is what nothing-to-hide looks like.
Single-molecule androstadienone versus blends
Choose a single-molecule concentrate if you want to layer and control the dose yourself. Choose a finished blend if you want a balanced product out of the bottle. Both exist in the catalog, and they serve different buyers.
The pure route means a product like the Pheromone Treasures androstadienone concentrate (6.5/10) or Love Scent's androstadienone 6ml (6.2/10). These are not meant to be worn alone for a full effect. They are DIY ingredients: a drop added to a cover scent or stacked with androstenol and androstenone to build a blend tuned to your situation. They score lower than the finished colognes precisely because they are raw material, not a complete product.
The blend route hands that work to the formulator. Voodoo for Men, Nude Original, and Grail of Affection arrive pre-balanced, with androstadienone sitting alongside other compounds under a cover scent. For most buyers, and certainly for beginners, a finished blend is the right call. Single molecules reward people who already know what each compound does and want to compose rather than buy.
What should you watch out for?
Treat disclosure of androstadienone as necessary, not sufficient. Naming the molecule is the price of entry. What a brand puts next to it tells you whether the disclosure is honest or decorative.
- → Oxytocin listed as a pheromone. Several Pherazone and PheroStrong products list oxytocin in the same compound array as androstadienone. Oxytocin is not a pheromone, and it does not reach the bloodstream through a topical or airborne spray at product concentrations. Its presence on the label is a credibility tell, not a feature.
- → Vague concentration. "Contains androstadienone" with no dose is weaker than "1 mg per 10 ml." If a brand names the molecule but will not say how much, ask why.
- → Sloppy or padded compound lists. PherX, the lowest-scoring brand in the catalog at a 4.46 average, lists androstadienone alongside filler entries and oxytocin. A messy ingredient array is its own warning.
- → Implausible totals. A compound list ten items long, topped with marketing language about being the strongest on the market, is selling the number rather than the chemistry. Androstadienone is active in microgram territory. More is not better.
How should you use androstadienone cologne?
Dose low and match it to the moment. Androstadienone rewards restraint and the right context far more than it rewards volume.
Start with a single application and pay attention to how interactions actually go, not how you hope they go. Because A1 amplifies existing warmth, save it for settings where some rapport is already on the table: an established connection, a relaxed evening, a later date rather than a first handshake. Skip it for cold rooms, tense meetings, and professional settings where emotional intimacy is not the goal.
If you are layering a single-molecule concentrate, treat the first bottle as calibration and add it sparingly to a blend you already like. The mistake people make is reaching for more compound when an interaction feels flat. With androstadienone, more does not fix a flat context. It deepens it.
Bottom line
Androstadienone is the rare pheromone compound with genuine science attached, and the science says less than the marketing claims. It shifts mood and physiology in women under controlled conditions, and it has repeatedly failed to move attractiveness ratings in a double-blind test. Worn well, in a context that already has warmth, the community reports it adds something. Worn as a cold-approach attraction switch, it is the wrong tool.
Buy from a label that names the molecule and ideally the dose, ignore any list padded with oxytocin, and start low. The Scout-scored products that pass those checks, with their compounds and the reasons to skip them, are on the men's ranked list.


