Our testing notes.
Oxytocin appears in Pheromone Treasures' single-molecule range, and the brand labels it clearly. But it needs a frank caveat, one that applies to every oxytocin spray on the market.
Oxytocin is a hormone that acts in the brain, and there's broad agreement, in the dedicated community and the underlying science, that applying it to skin or inhaling it at product doses doesn't get it where it would need to go. Whatever effects users report are far better explained by expectation and ritual than by the molecule.
As an independent publication, we can't endorse the mechanism. If you're curious, it's a cheap, low-stakes experiment. For real social or bonding signals, look to the brand's androstenol and androstadienone concentrates instead.

