Our testing notes.
At first glance, Pherazone Ultra For Women looks impressively comprehensive: six named compounds, though androstenol appears twice. Androstenone, androstenol, androstadienone, copulins and oxytocin. Copulins are legitimately interesting, female-specific aliphatic acids tied to increased testosterone response and reduced social inhibitions in men, and they show up in serious enthusiast products. Androstadienone has actual published research behind its mood-elevating effects. Androstenol may encourage social approachability. These are real compounds that warrant real interest.
The oxytocin claim is where things unravel. Oxytocin is a neuropeptide that produces bonding and trust effects, but only when it reaches the brain. Applied topically or diffused as a fragrance, it can't cross the blood-brain barrier at any concentration achievable in a cosmetic product. Its inclusion isn't just scientifically contested. It's a pattern the community flags as a sign that a brand puts marketing language over formulation integrity. When a company leans on 'oxytocin' as a selling point, it raises questions about how carefully the rest of the formula was designed.
There are no customer reviews for this product, and Pherazone doesn't have the community forum presence, on Pherotruth, DiscoverXS, or r/pheromones, that enthusiast-grade brands like Liquid Alchemy Labs have built over years of independent field testing. That absence matters. The three-bottle bundle at $293.74 is a significant bet on a product with no verified user track record. Women after a well-regarded female pheromone formula with copulins are better off starting with a smaller, community-validated option before buying in bulk.


