Our testing notes.
Products made specifically for women attracted to women are genuinely rare, and Pherazone deserves some credit for addressing the use case at all. The compound list here, androstenone, androstenol, androstadienone, androstenol again (listed twice under slightly different spellings, which is its own concern), copulins and oxytocin, runs longer than most products on the market. Length isn't quality, though, and one entry draws immediate scrutiny.
Oxytocin. The community is consistent on this point: oxytocin can't cross the blood-brain barrier via topical or airborne application at fragrance-level concentrations. Including it as an active pheromone ingredient is either a misreading of the science or a claim designed to sound compelling. Either way, it's a red flag regulators have noted in similar product categories. The legitimate compounds are a different story. Copulins have some research support for their effects on testosterone response, androstadienone is one of the more studied putative human pheromones, and androstenol is widely tied to social approachability. If those are actually present at meaningful concentrations, there could be something real here.
The core problem is that there are no customer reviews for this product, not a single data point from a real wearer. In this category, field testing and community reports are how products build credibility, since controlled studies are rare. Without those, and without compound dosages or ratios, the product is essentially unevaluable on pheromone terms. It may smell pleasant and work fine as a fragrance. Whether it does anything beyond that is genuinely unknown. At $103.97, that's a lot to ask for an unknown quantity.


